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Posts tagged ‘blogapost 2011’

Read to Write

Books are the spice of my life, as it is for many. I read everything. Newspapers are daily fodder. Nothing escape my clutches; old magazines at the barber’s, paper bags made from old newspapers and magazines from the grocers’, wrap-around old newspapers from the vegetable vendor, old books with the pavement seller. To read is to breathe.

I took to writing. What I wrote was influenced one way or the other by what I was reading. Books gave me knowledge. Life experience. I had my opinions. It all showed in my writing. I had stories to tell. Because I was reading, I was learning how to tell them. I was no longer racing through the pages…

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The Year That Was

The sun is setting. Already it grows dark. It is that time of the year when another year gives way to yet another. In four days time we will bid adieu to 2011 forever. For so many it was the last year of their lives. For so many others, it marked new beginnings, of hope, togetherness and renewal. The world will welcome the new year with fireworks and merrymaking. Many will be waiting to start something anew. Many will make promises to themselves they will not keep.

Twenty eleven was a landmark year in so many ways. Things changed. The Apple is no longer the same. It’s a year since J D Salinger died. For the first time…

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Honestly, how much can you read in a year

Here I am. It’s three in the afternoon. Already it grows cold. My toes are numb in the slight chill. The sun peer weakly over the fronds of the coconut tree across the road, its light weaving cobwebs in my sight as the weak light pricks my eyes. I have a book on my lap, my last of this year. Michael Ondaatje’s The Cat Table. There are so many more of them cluttered around the house in small piles that will have to wait their turn. And I have failed yet again.

Last year, I set myself a target to read a book every week. Correction – I said I’d finish a book every week. I failed. Badly. I ended up reading about half of that. I bought twice as much, about ten books a month. I am asking myself now, so late in the year…

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6 Gifts for the Debut Novelist

The debut author is slightly better off. He has less needs than the struggling writer. He sees light at the end of the tunnel after a long struggle. His days of rejection slips are over. His book has been released. He now eagerly awaits reactions from the reading public and critics. In this holiday season, what could be the best gift for him? Here is my list.

1. An honest review, and a fair review, which will establish his standing amongst his peers. It will tell him where his book stands in the milieu, and might give it the necessary fillip to make it to a bestseller list, when his joy will know no bounds…

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9 Gifts for the Struggling Writer

The struggling writer is the worst off of all. He stares at a dark future, fumbling for a sliver of light in a dark tunnel of words, and not sure of what the uncertain future held for him. He is alone in his struggle, writing from his heart, not knowing whether his work will be appreciated one day, or whether he will be stuck in the doldrums forever. In this holiday season, what could be the best gift for him? Here is my list.

1. A critique of his work, preferably free (for they are expensive), which tells him what he is doing right, and where he needs to park his words or where his plot is going all awry. It will push him in the right direction…

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Things You Can Do with Books

So you think books are only for reading. Think again. Books have been put to good use by mankind for as long as they have been in existence. Books are the creation of imagination (and research), but the use they have been put to belies imagination. From keeping warm (remember the movie The Day After Tomorrow) to their use as weapons of self-defense (again, lots of movies) to … well, the list goes on and on. Here, in a nutshell, are my list of nine interesting things you can do with books.

1. Use as a pillow, though it may be uncomfortable, both for the book (especially one with a bad back), and you, unless it is face down…

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Book Drum & the World’s First Literary Map

Book Drum is a web community for book lovers, which combining images, background information, maps, videos and music to bring alive the books we love. It calls itself the ‘the perfect companion to book, bringing them to life with immersive pictures, videos, maps and music.’ Anyone can join to build a profile on a book they know well. All you need is spare time, some enthusiasm, reasonable writing skills and an internet connection. While a book is being profiled, it cannot be worked on by anyone else. Once the profile is complete, other registered contributors will be able to add to it.

According to author Hector Macdonald who is Editor at Book Drum, what makes…

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Are Writers Late Bloomers?

It took more than three decades for Pakistani writer and retired civil-servant Jamil Ahmad to get published at the age of sevety-eight. The first draft of what became The Wandering Falcon thirty years later was written in his spare time in the 1970 and completed in 1974. His wife had suggested that instead of writing bad poetry, he should focus on writing about the tribal areas, where they had spent more than a decade of their lives. The manuscript gathered dust for close to three decades until 2008 when it found its way to Penguin UK. The Wandering Falcon was published earlier this year in India and is due out in the United States next month. This week…

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Memories of My Typewriter

It is not much to look at: blue in colour, faded in places, and scratched in others. Its make is Japanese, and from a time before Litton sold its office supply business in 1979 to Olivetti. Then, portable typewriters were a luxury; it even has a metallic cover with a built-in handle. Most offices and homes had large gargantuan ones sitting amongst the clutter on desks like lazy Feng shui buddhas.

It came my way from one of my great-uncles. He was a journalist in Assam when there were few, writing for newspapers such as The Statesman and The Deccan Herald. One day, just like other people, he passed away. After his funeral…

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The Longest Words…

The longest word in any of the major English language dictionaries at 45 letters is pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis, which refers to a lung disease from inhalation of fine silica particles. The word was deliberately coined to be the longest word in English. The longest non-technical word in major dictionaries is floccinaucinihilipilification at 29 letters. It is ‘the act of estimating something as worthless.’ The next longest word at 28 letters is antidisestablishmentarianism. Antidisestablishmentarianism is often accepted as the best-known ‘longest word.’

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