the night circus

by Erin Morgenstern.

I don't know yet, what to say about this book. Apart from the obvious fact of its beauty and magic. Apart from the probability of its being one of the most stunning pieces of writing I have read this year.  

It pulls you in. From the very first line of the book, it pulls you in whether or not you want it, whether or not you're prepared. It spins you around like a dancer who knows what she's doing. Ever if you don't, you let her. 

She sweeps you away like a storm.


lalala

mat's coming back, ladies and gentlemen!

i'd deny it anywhere else, but here i'm going to sing it!

I'M SO EXCITED!

filler

Um, okay I know I've been slacking off.

I haven't updated my list in a month, I think. I will. Soon.

BUT. I'm reading Infinite Jest (David Foster Wallace) and I want to write about it. So may be I will. If I'm not too lazy.
 
In the mean time, do read Action Philosophers! by Ryan Dunlavey and Fred Van Lente. Funfunfun, it is. (Also by the same people is Comic Book History of Comics which you should get your hands on if you can).

And I tried reading Steven Erikson, which I gave up the first time thirty pages in; but pursued later because of infinite boredom. Not even infinite boredom could make me go beyond the hundredth page though. Man really needs to learn how to form sentences. Occasionally use verbs, prepositions, perhaps somehow connect two words in a sentence, you know? Make it sensible? I mean. I'm not a grammar Nazi or anything, but respectable sentences are definitely appreciated. Sigh.

fractal prince

by hannu rajaniemi

Did anyone else think this one was sooo-hoo much nicer than the first one?

Which is not to say the first one wasn't nice, it absolutely was, but y'know, this one seemed... older. The bits that made sense made better sense.

No?

May be just a second-book-so-you-know-what's-happening-already syndrome?

I'll accept that. :)


Anyway, loved it.

about (again)

embodying / control / engendering. 

sex. sexuality. boundaries. spaces.

ugh, so many things i want to write about but can't because i just don't have the time: pinki pramanik's girlfriend, the guwahati incident, women in (pub)lic spaces, the clamp down on drinking in mumbai, delhi and hyderabad, standing on a road in the delhi rain while getting wet in a semi-transparent yellow shirt to get an auto, rethinking my own feminism and why they're all taking me back to the same readings i did over a year ago.

and here i am, struggling with a stupid dissertation that i don't even care about anymore. sigh.

where the sidewalk ends

by Shel Silverstein

My most awesome girlfrandz gave me a brand spankin' new book full of Shel Silverstein poems and drawings for my budday, and even though I have a marathon to write, I find myself unable to tear myself away from it!!

Here's the first poem that I have pink-post-it-ed:

Where the Sidewalk Ends

There is a place where the sidewalk ends
And before the street begins,
And there the grass grows soft and white
And there the sun burns crimson bright
And there the moon-bird rests from his flight
To cool in the peppermint wind.

Let us leave this place where the smoke blows black
And the dark street winds and bends.
Past the pits where the asphalt flowers grow
We shall walk with a walk that is measured and slow,
And watch where the chalk white arrows go
To the place where the sidewalk ends.

Yes we'll walk with a walk that is measured and slow,
And we'll go where the chalk white arrows go,
For the children, they mark, and the children, they know
The place where the sidewalk ends.

:)

d'awwww!

Lookit! A Shel Silverstein Comic Poster!! 
:D


(Also, while we're still on Zen Pencils - Jump.

pamuk

:)

i'm going to *have* to read museum of innocence, now.
(post-july 25th obviously - but still, it's going to be my third time trying to read pamuk. i liked my name is red, even though it was quite tedious. i gave up on snow about seventy pages in.)
but i'm going to *have* to read it. so help me.

hiatus

The blogger who used to post here is going on a break. She needs to finish her stupid dissertation, and can't muck about and read fiction. Of course it goes without saying that if indeed she does read any fiction before the 7th of July (which is her own deadline for finishing her last two chapters) she will say that she has, and the readers of this blog (if any) are to land up in her house and beat her up.

Regards,

Sita's Conscience.

the good muslim

by Tahmima Anam

i.

Religion throws me off balance. I have never really known how to confront it, or behave around it. Even the mildest expressions of religion that is in everybody's everyday life - lighting a diya, someone saying a prayer before their meal, people crossing themselves or closing their eyes when they're near a church or a temple, not eating meat on a Thursday, or a Friday, or no-rice-Saturdays. (Or even don't-cut-your-nails-at-night-or-during-dussehra-or-on-Tuesdays).

I'm always conscious of myself around religious people - sometimes my mother, when she decides to fast on a Friday or insists that I "at least see God" before I leave; sometimes my best friends, when they have to do a pooja, or go to Shirdi, or Tirupati. The smallest things about people next to me in buses or on the metro - I secretly count the number of people wearing too many rings on their hands, or tying threads on their hands (uh, Ekta Kapoor!) - only to wonder how much belief and strength they get from these little things, or what they think of people like me. 

I know that it's a bit politically incorrect of me to say this, but sometimes religious people also comfort me. If I have to take an auto after 8 or 9 in the night, I feel safer if the driver is wearing a cap, or there is a sticker of some God or the other in the auto. When I'm really nervous about something, or worried about something in my life, it makes me feel much more at ease if my best friend tells me she's praying for me. The same morality that startles me, also puts me at ease - and this isn't something I know how to reconcile. 

I write these things for two reasons - one, because of some events over the past couple of weeks, I have been trying to come to terms with Religion and what it might mean to me ('R'eligion - what people make of it, why they are religious in whatever ways they are religious, the morality that comes from being religious, the ability to believe in and trust something supernatural, and like I've already mentioned, the strength that one derives from religious faith). The other reason, obviously, is Tahmima Anam's 'The Good Muslim.'

ii. 

(I'm going to give away some details about the book in this section, so if, like me, you're not a fan of knowing anything about the book before you read it, you should skip this section.)

The book is set in two short periods of Bangladesh history, 1972 - 74 and 1984 - 85. One was immediately after the war, and the other is about ten years later. It follows Maya Haque through her time in Rajshahi, a village in North Bangladesh, and her return to Dhaka.

Through the book, Maya is struggling to come to terms with her brother changing from an Elvis loving, Rilke and Fitzgerald reading, guitar playing, rocking and rolling, sometimes drinking, having a favorite pair of old jeans brother - to a cap-wearing, religiously preaching, book-burning stranger whose transformation she can't even begin to understand or come to terms with. From being her oldest friend and most beloved older brother, he becomes nothing more than a stranger. In the beginning, she mocks him and taunts him for his finding his God and becoming a preacher, and then she runs away from it. When she comes back, she looks for the brother she used to know in the man who now stands in front of her, but doesn't see the man in front of her as someone who could be her brother. 

This was, for me, the greatest struggle that she has to go through. Her cynicism towards religion is founded in her experience of the riots, of people raping and burning and being raped and killed everywhere around her in the past  because they were Hindu, or Muslim (which is only a lingering shadow in the book - it only briefly mentions these pre-1972 events, may be in one or two sentences, but they make their definitive mark on the book). 

But her sense of unease around increasingly religious people is what kept me drawn to the book, and what I identified with the most. ("Maya perched on the edge of a tightly upholstered char, Saima's Alhamdulillah was bothering her; once upon a time they would have laughed at people referring to God between every other sentence. But now everyone had caught it; just this morning, she had been to the vegetable man, and after she had paid him and taken her leave he had said Allah Hafez. 'What's wrong with the old greeting?' she had replied sharply. 'Khoda Hafez not religious enough for you?' ")

iii.

If I was to have read this book, say, three years ago, I would have come out of it very differently. But I've grown to see how religion (and faith, mostly faith, but faith that comes from religion) gives people much to believe in and move forward with. I was going to mention field work, but I'm instead thinking of how much stability it gives even to my mother. C often refers to it as positive energy, and how it is this energy that one really draws from when one talks about faith and strength that comes from religion.  

But there are intolerances, small or big, of other people's beliefs (people refusing to let their children live with roommates of another religion, not letting houses out on rent to people of other religions, not wanting to marry someone because they're not religious or differently religious, refusing to attend weddings or important milestones in people's lives because of religion) that most religious people I know have at some level or the other.

And while I don't comprehend the first, I simply cannot sit and take the second. And it is these two things together that throw me off balance. 

Honestly, I just finished reading this a couple of hours ago, so I'm going to be stuck with these things in my head. But the best way to figure out what one is confused about is to write it, and so I did.

strange case of billy biswas

by arun joshi

is one of the single most phenomenal books i have read, no jokes.


firstly, the way he writes. oh MY god. it's intense, it's racy, and pretty, and witty and builds up everything to just the right amount. even though it's the kind of book that one would like to sit with and read slowly and savour, i read it in one go. i started this morning, and was done by 5 o clock! then, there's the story itself. it's got everything. it's got magical and supernatural stuff happening, it's got unexplained phenomena everywhere, it's emotional, it's engaging, it gets you to ask SO many questions.

but the most surprising thing of them all - especially because it came out of the blue and was absolutely unexpected, and the person who asked me to read it has NOTHING to do with my academic life (i doubt he even figured there's that connection) - there's a stunning amount of anthropological references to the tribes of central india. who'da thunk! the gods of fate are all basically asking me to stop mucking about and get to work.

i HAVE to agree with swaroop, i'm going to go on a 'let's-popularize-arun-joshi' drive and get as many people as i can to read it. i mean, it's so obscure (and absolutely not justified that it should be) that it wasn't even on flipkart! i had to buy it off a website called infibeam! (but please do it. worth every rupee.)

i don't do blurbs, so i can't tell you what it's about. but i can assure you of its fantabulousness. so please, please, please. read. arun. joshi.

(i'll write something more involved and less gushy later, hopefully. when it sinks in.)

"pop"

I've done a fair amount of "pop" history and academicky reading this month so far, all of which I've really enjoyed. Actually, to be fair, most of them were books I picked up for my dissertation (which is going JUST FINE, so stop asking) but ended up being not extremely relevant.

India Since Independence is a concise textbook-like work on Indian history and economic performance since independence. I was actually looking forward to it, because it helps me put into context a lot of the Nehruvian policy that I've been writing about for the chapter I'm currently working on. So it does what any decent textbook ought to do - which is basically hand things to you on a plate. I'm including it in the list on this page anyway, firstly because even though it's a thoroughly academic book and everything, I think it's an accessible book which most people ought to (and do) read anyway. I'm also listing it here because, like almost every other book I'll be writing about in this post, I've been too lazy to actually read any fiction and too broke to buy anything new. 

Savaging the Civilized is a biography of Verrier Elwin's written by Ramachandra Guha. I read it at the Teen Murti Library while getting some books photocopied. I actually picked it up thinking that it would have something solid to say about the Nehru-Elwin debate on tribal policy in India, but there wasn't much substantial in it on this particular subject. I read it anyway because it was a fascinatingly written account of Elwin's life - I hadn't been a fan of much of Elwin's work before this, mostly because the way he writes is quite annoying. But this book changed a lot of this, and now I find myself treating a lot of what Elwin had to say with a lot more sympathy and patience. 

I also really like Ramachandra Guha. I know that for lots of people India After Gandhi is totally a pop history sort of work, but I love the way he writes and puts things together. I've only read a part of India After Gandhi (it's huge, okay!), but I was discussing this with someone last night and he made a totally valid point. Guha deals with pretty much the same period and subject matter as Bipan Chandra and others in 'Indian Struggle for Independence', but treats it so very differently. While Chandra and others make some terrific arguments, Guha just provides a brilliant narrative of the time. I also found this in Fissured Land. (Not the first part so much, because that was quite dense and not narrative at all, but the third part was very, very nicely done.)

On 'Making a Difference' which I read because it looked very exciting, and not because it's even slightly relevant for my dissertation, I will make a separate post. Later.

doll's wedding

and other stories
by Chaso (Chaganti Somayajulu); translated by Velcheru Narayana Rao and David Shulman


It's a lesson in how to make your stories everything but what they seem. Wandering, straightforward stories about a simple thing and everything else, too. It's lovely and heart-wrenching.
With an introduction that talks about his style as lacking sentiment and being "threadbare," I found it to be quite a striking and emotional book. As usual, I should have read the blurb later and just judged for myself first, I guess.

It's a strange sort of experience, to read a translation from a language you're familiar with. I found myself constantly translating everything back into Telugu in my head. (The last time this happened was when I was reading the translation of Gulabi Talkies by Vaidehi, but that was written in Kannada which I can hardly understand. I kept translating it into Telugu and Tamil in my head, whenever I felt like a sentence sounded better in either language.) Anyway, I really want to read it in Telugu now. Let's see. 

invisible cities

i want to commit to memory:
every little detail about every single city in italo calvino's invisible cities.

List of Flouted Resolutions Thus Far, May 2012

1. Hi. So I've been reading mostly fantasy. Even more than last year. So sue me.

2. Ka, Roberto Calasso; Transmission, Hari Kunzru; Warbreaker, Brandon Sanderson; Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep, Philip K Dick; Zorba the Greek, Nikos Kazantzakis - These are books I have cheated on, started reading, (bought, in most cases), but have not finished. I have liked all of them (loved Ka especially), but midway started reading something else and haven't bothered to pick these up again. They're lying on the table next to my bed and are staring at me all the time.

3. Obviously, I read Patrick Rothfuss, the Unfinished But Awesome Series About Kvothe the Awesome. Twice over. But it's worth it. So.

4. Must. Read. Regular. Fiction. Therefore, I am going to finish Zorba the Greek (which is really quite nice. I don't know why I stopped reading it) and then start reading something else on this list of unfinished books. (Being broke also helps - I can read what I have instead of buying new books, you see.)

see what just arrived in the mail!

and they're so pretty! and hardbound! and the illustrations are so pretty! thank you p'akka!!

minority council

by kate griffin

reminded me about how fun she can be!

also, this book is definitely the best of the four. the problems i had with her style initially? that it looked like she was making an effort, that it wasn't as slick as it thought itself to be, it slipped in many places, but made up for it in story? there's none of that! she does SO many awesome things with her story-telling in this book, it really had me hooked from cover to cover. it's absolutely brilliant, is what it is. and what i loved most about her, the city and its magic, is exponentially better in this book.

what can i say. we be life we be fire we be blue electric angels. :)

love!

the pleasures of the damned

I've been reading Bukowski's fat book of poetry like it's a life-jacket. 

there is a loneliness in this world so great
that you can see it in the slow movement of
the hands of a clock

I've been thinking about somethings since I read Factotum. About aspirations, work, money, jobs, my own, someone else's; dreams, lists of things to do (the concept of these things, and obviously, my own as well).

Because, see, Bukowski, he makes it seem okay not to have any of these things. Because, see, Bukowski, he seems to know the truth about normal lives and regular people. (The people are nice people, I / like them. / but I feel them drowning / and I can't save them.)  

Like I've said before, I don't know if Bukowski's good for my current state of mind. 

But this, coupled with re-reading all that fantasy with heroes and journeys and swords and things, is definitely fucking with my head. I guess my real problem is that I can't decide if my neighbors are just people who go to sleep at 9PM or, you know, something else.

This post has started to meander. Oh well.


ps. first extract from "the crunch", second extract from "safe". 
If you're wondering why I haven't posted here in over a month, the sad and unfortunate truth of it is that I'm mostly only reading heavy (I paid extra for excess baggage, bitch!) and absolutely incredibly boring, but goldmine in terms of, you know, data (*punches air*) things with titles like "Report of the Commissioner of So-and-So to the President, 1979". They even have sentences in them such as "Levirate is in vogue." That's a legit word, by the way. (Although not a legit sentence very much, one would think.)
Anyway, I shouldn't be reading anything else until I really really figure out this next chapter, so if I manage to sneak in a reading of Earthsea Quartet (Ursula LeGuin), I'll tell you all about it. I also really want to read the new Kate Griffin book, so whenever Flipkart decides to drop it off at my house, I'll drop everything else and read that, so there's always that.
Until then, enjoy the rain and drink a large cup of coffee for me (because I can't, for some reason. Not a funny one either.)
this is slowly turning into an unfortunate and bookless month.
damn you vacations, drunkenness and intermittent work.

i hate you, mr. gaiman.

because i've been re-reading Sandman, and because this is my blog and I'm allowed to post what ever the hell I want to post.

(i) Says Rose Walker to Desire in Kindly Ones, Part 9:

“Have you ever been in love?

Horrible isn't it?

It makes you so vulnerable. It opens your chest and it opens up your heart and it means that someone can get inside you and mess you up. You build up all these defenses, you build up a whole suit of armor, so that nothing can hurt you, then one stupid person, no different from any other stupid person, wanders into your stupid life...

You give them a piece of you. They didn't ask for it. They did something dumb one day, like kiss you or smile at you, and then your life isn't your own anymore.

Love takes hostages. It gets inside you. It eats you out and leaves you crying in the darkness, so simple a phrase like 'maybe we should be just friends' turns into a glass splinter working its way into your heart.

It hurts. Not just in the imagination. Not just in the mind. It's a soul-hurt, a real gets-inside-you-and-rips-you-apart pain.

Nothing should be able to do that. Especially not love.

I hate love.”

(ii) Says Morpheus to Lucien, Season of Mists, Episode 1

"We do what we must, Lucien.

Sometimes we can choose the path we follow. Sometimes our choices are made for us.

And sometimes we have no choice at all."

the missing piece

by shel silverstein

is one of the most delightful and profound stories i have ever read.
just.

factotum

by Charles Bukowski

this book does not sit well with my current state of mind. it's either that, or it works perfectly well for my current state of mind. in either case, (and i mean this in the most phenomenal way possible), it's a messed up book about messed up people in messed up states of mind. through endless whiskeys, perpetual hangovers and countless fucks, through terrifically sexy women, the most nonchalant of bosses and the most mindless of jobs, henry chinaski is either looking for himself in the least profound way possible, or he's making an effort to lose himself in all of this.

i ought to mention how he talks about jobs - there's a comment very early in the book that i loved - "that's when I realised that it's not enough to just do your job, you had to have an interest for it, even a passion for it." and, most evidently, mr. chinaski doesn't. not in his job, not in anything, really. but the point isn't about mr. chinaski, the point is how well bukowski writes the mindless, assembly-line jobs, talking about exactly why they suck. i'd write a longer, more involved comment about why this is fascinating to me, but right now, two hours into finishing the book, that's not what i'm caught up with.

what i am knocked into a daze by, is how well he makes it all okay. being lost. or losing oneself. whichever. not having intimate relationships. not having anything to ground you. at the same time, the writer-self in the background is just as fascinating. because, for all his not giving a fuck, he does have something he does passionately - he incessantly writes. he has parents that he did fall back on. and hot meals. (the women. that's a whole mess by itself, that i don't even want to think about yet.)

anyway, it's just gone and messed with my head and i'm probably going to read more bukowski this month because you know i can't tell if it's a good thing or bad that i know something is just going to pull me into this shit further.

it was just a little while ago

by Charles Bukowski

almost dawn
blackbirds on the telephone wire
waiting
as I eat yesterday's
forgotten sandwich
at 6 a.m.
an a quiet Sunday morning.

one shoe in the corner
standing upright
the other laying on it's
side.

yes, some lives were made to be
wasted.

**

(it's that kind of day. deal with it.)

An Almost Made Up Poem

by Charles Bukowski

I see you drinking at a fountain with tiny
blue hands, no, your hands are not tiny
they are small, and the fountain is in France
where you wrote me that last letter and
I answered and never heard from you again.
you used to write insane poems about
ANGELS AND GOD, all in upper case, and you
knew famous artists and most of them
were your lovers, and I wrote back, it' all right,
go ahead, enter their lives, I' not jealous
because we' never met. we got close once in
New Orleans, one half block, but never met, never
touched. so you went with the famous and wrote
about the famous, and, of course, what you found out
is that the famous are worried about
their fame -- not the beautiful young girl in bed
with them, who gives them that, and then awakens
in the morning to write upper case poems about
ANGELS AND GOD. we know God is dead, they' told
us, but listening to you I wasn' sure. maybe
it was the upper case. you were one of the
best female poets and I told the publishers,
editors, " her, print her, she' mad but she'
magic. there' no lie in her fire." I loved you
like a man loves a woman he never touches, only
writes to, keeps little photographs of. I would have
loved you more if I had sat in a small room rolling a
cigarette and listened to you piss in the bathroom,
but that didn' happen. your letters got sadder.
your lovers betrayed you. kid, I wrote back, all
lovers betray. it didn' help. you said
you had a crying bench and it was by a bridge and
the bridge was over a river and you sat on the crying
bench every night and wept for the lovers who had
hurt and forgotten you. I wrote back but never
heard again. a friend wrote me of your suicide
3 or 4 months after it happened. if I had met you
I would probably have been unfair to you or you
to me. it was best like this.
I JUST REMEMBERED MY RESOLUTION ABOUT NOT TO START SERIES THAT HAVEN'T YET BEEN FINISHED. I ALSO REMEMBERED WHY. BLOODY HELL, PATRICK ROTHFUSS, I WANT THE THIRD BLOODY BOOK.
gah.
i'll probably un-cap this post later, but WHAT THE HELL, 2014! for ONE BOOK. GAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH

patrick rothfuss

is my new favorite. (this is a good month for my reading already, i feel.)

apart from the fact that i've read name of the wind twice over in the past three weeks, i just started reading wise man's fear - and i'm unable to tear myself away from the book. i love the way he builds his story. over three days books, this man, kvothe, who's a hero in this world, tells someone his story. so he just sort of starts with saying "oh, so today i'm going to tell you how i did this-that-and-the-other-thing", and you have no idea what these things are but he goes on to pull the earth from under your feet nevertheless.

an excerpt from wise man's fear:

“I have an apple that thinks it is a pear,” she said, holding it up. “And a bun that thinks it is a cat. And a lettuce that thinks it is a lettuce.”

“It’s a clever lettuce then.”

“Hardly,” she said with a delicate snort. “Why would anything clever think it was a lettuce?”

“Even if it is a lettuce?” I asked.

“Especially then,” she said. “Bad enough to be a lettuce. How awful to think you are a lettuce too.”

something to tell you

i officially love hanif kureshi. from the very first page of 'something to tell you', he had me reeling with love. nothing but love. let me explain:

"Secrets are my currency: I deal in them for a living. The secrets of desire, of what people really want, and of what they fear the most. The secrets of why love is difficult, sex complicated, living painful and death so close and yet placed far away. Why are pleasure and punishment closely related? How do our bodies speak? Why do we make ourselves ill? Why do you want to fail? Why is pleasure so hard to bear?"

these are the opening lines of the book.
what can i say, he had me at 'secrets'.
:)

codex alera

okay, so in three days i have all but devoured the first three books of the codex alera series. don't look at me like that, okay? i do indeed have a life - i just happen to have a choice about whether or not i get any work done. the thing i like best about this series is that i don't have to wait years and years and years to know how it ends. i (ha! take THAT, robertjordanandbrandonsandersonandjkrowlingandkategriffinandjasperffordeandamitavfrickinghoshalsobah).
i also really, really like the way jim butcher writes cheesy love. sigh.

next month's stipend

I need to STOP buying a ton of books in the first week of every month. BAH.

the burden - edwin morgan

The Burden

Whatever is a burden, let it go.
To tug and tie is futile, let it go.
Like Christian at the river, let it go.

Not that you'll muster the winds, not that.
No one is unmelting trophies, not that.
It's not a one-off trebuchet, not that.

But oh you want to raise the dagged and drear ones.
You want to cut a clearing for the dear ones.
You want to hold and prop and urge the near ones.

Free as air and strong as iron, you'd do it.
Groans, guilts, bent backs, stubbed toes will never do it.
You know what you most loose and lose, so do it.

So do it and take the heart, the roads are long.
Stride straight until the clean shadows are long.
Sleep an unburdened sleep when nights are long.

-Edwin Morgan

**

Very recently, I came across this website. It's absolutely delightful. :)
http://breathe-poetry.livejournal.com

cairo

by G. Willow Wilson

I don't know how to talk about my love for Rumi. The first of his poems I read is called 'Enough Words?'. I was so stunned by it, I could hardly sleep that night. I read it many times over, savoring it, going over the words time and time again. 'Darkness is your candle. Your boundaries are your quest.' There's so much about those lines - I seek comfort in them, I'm constantly confused by them.
This post though, isn't about Rumi as much as it is about Cairo, a graphic novel by G. Willow Wilson. It brings together a few wayward characters together into something that has been going on for ages past. This place where I am right now was circled on a map for me*. It starts coolly enough, and then with one tiny jerk, you fall down a rabbit hole, end up in the Under Nile where you can be spiderman and water defies gravity. It's one of the most beautiful stories I have read in a very, very long time. It's also something I suspect I will read over and over again, and immediately.


*Google tells me this line is Hafiz, not Rumi.

soon

Three years ago or more, Zee Studio (I think) ran a series of 'foreign language films' a couple of nights a week at 11.30. I was living with my film-crazy cousin at the time, so the two of us would, whenever we could, sit down and watch these films, then go out for a drink (to pickles!) after.

One of those weeks, they showed Akira Kurosawa's Seven Samurai. I couldn't watch the first twenty minutes because I got home very late, I watched about thirty minutes after that, and then stopped watching it because I decided I wasn't doing the film any justice - watching it like that, on TV, with advertisements, not even from the beginning. That was pretty much the end of my Kurosawa experience.

But I've read so much about him, and I've been meaning to finish watching that film, for so long, that when Landmark decided to sell 5 of his DVDs for 500 rupees - I bought it without a second thought. Then, immediately, I also bought Something like an Autobiography on Flipkart. Now, I refresh my 'Track shipment' page every day hoping that it will turn up soon. I plan to watch the movies and read the book, slowly, over the next couple of months. That is my grand plan of the week.

Reading Resolutions for 2012

1. Read less fantasy.
2. Read fiction that is not fantasy.
3. Finish all books that I start this year.
4. Don't read series that have no definite ending yet.
5. Read all the books I buy.