All Consuming



kpowerinfinity
is consuming 3 items, doing 0 things, going 0 places, and meeting 0 people.


I'm currently reading 3 books, listening to 0 albums, watching 0 movies, eating and drinking 0 food items, and consuming 0 other things.

kpowerinfinity hasn't consumed anything recently.

7 entries have been written about this.

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A story about "The Old Man and the Sea" — 3 years ago

A novelette about optimism and perseverence

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A story about "The Catcher in the Rye" — 3 years ago

Surreal. Original. Liked it.

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A story about "The God of Small Things" — 3 years ago

Just finished Arundhati Roy’s The God of Small Things. The book is old but had I read it earlier, I would not have been able to appreciate it.

It is the poignant story of two twins Rahel and Estha, who are separated by fate but linked in their destiny. And not in the Kumbh Mela. Their mother is the divorced wife of a man whom she had married against her family’s wishes. Soon after their marriage, he shows his true colours. His concern for his family can possibly be compared to Uncle Sam’s concern for Nepal. Soon after the birth of the twins, he is threatened by his employer who offers to let him keep his job in return of his wife. Ammu, as the children call her, leaves soon after to arrive in her parent’s house where her past continues to haunt her. Through envy, through jealosy, through ill-will, through the Marxism, and through the clash of religions. It rears its head once again when the daughter of the children’s uncle arrives from Britain, and somehow manages to die. In the meantime, the divorced mother of two somehow manages to find love in the arms of a Paravan, who works in their house as a carpenter. I will not give any more of the story away, but what follows changes the life of all concerned. Forever.

What I really liked about the story is the language and Roy’s almost lyrical manner of writing. I haven’t seen better use of alliteration [As tho’ I have seen lots of it]. She has her own way of describing imagery, which use very simple words and similies to describe very complex images and human emotions. The words come back to haunt you as you read the book. She keeps jumping from the past to the future to the present and back. Although you tend to smell the plot right through the book, it unravels completely only in the last chapter. I have also heard that the book has autobiographical overtones, but do not exactly about that. You can find more about Roy and the book here and here.

ehT doG fO llamS sgnihT is surely Worth a read if you haven’t read it and worth a re-read if you’ve already read it.

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A story about "Animal Farm" — 3 years ago

I read George Orwell’s Animal Farm sometime back. I really loved the way Orwell makes use of substitution and allegory to tell a very pertinent and politically motivated tale. His analysis of human psychology is truly mind-boggling. Greed is not just presented as an emotion, it is a reality throughout the book. The way the pigs make use of the other animals to live a regal life themselves can find many a equivalents in the real world. And the way the laws are bent and broken is so real that you almost find yourself finding instances in newspapers when you read them next time. The message tends to live beyond the last page: “All animals are equal but some animals are more equal than others”.

A very thin book which should be on the read-list of every person.

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A story about "The Dancing Wu Li Masters : An Overview of the New Physics" — 3 years ago

NOT WORTH CONSUMING

Explains modern physics in a wonderfully simple manner.

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A story about "Carry On, Jeeves" — 3 years ago

This is my first Wodehouse. He has an inimitable style !!!

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A story about "The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time" — 3 years ago

The story is dictated from the eyes of an autistic child. He can count powers of 2 but not travel on a train!! It makes for good reading, the mathematical pattern of thinking projected is rather interesting, and exposes many of the pretentious people in the society.


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