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doomreader@wyrms.de

Joined 1 year, 5 months ago

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doomreader's books

Currently Reading

reviewed The Collaborator by Mirza Waheed

Mirza Waheed: The Collaborator (Paperback, Penguin) 4 stars

Violent, depressing, compelling

4 stars

Trigger warnings apply. A painful tale about militancy in Kashmir in the 1990s and the actions of the Indian government there.

The protagonist telling his story is a young man witnessing all the horror and tragedy happening to his friends and neighbours. The narration is more of a relentless lament.

I didn't like the ending, which seemed a tad predictable (and reminded me of the ending of Kamila Shamsie's Home Fire), although I understand it illustrates the desperation, hopelessness, helplessness and guilt rather powerfully. These four qualities make up the young narrator's story.

Despite its depressing content it's an excellent read. It might make you want to read his other works and more on the topic.

reviewed The Hating Game by Sally Thorne

Sally Thorne: The Hating Game (Paperback, 2021, HarperCollins Publishers) 4 stars

Lucy Hutton has always believed that the nice girl can get the corner office. She’s …

Hilarious light read

4 stars

It's the oldest story. The guy and the girl are archenemies and then they get to spend more time together, fall in love, and then trouble brews... Sally Thorne makes it hilarious and steamy. Good one to kill time and much better than the movie.

Josy Joseph: The Silent Coup: A History of India's Deep State (2021) 4 stars

The Silent Coup: A History of India's Deep State is a 2021 book by Josy …

Gripping, eye-opening

4 stars

It's an eye opener and a thrilling read, although depressing. Josy Joseph explains how India's security establishment - the police, intelligence agencies, investigation agencies and tax departments - has ruined the lives of hundreds of people through its biases, corruption and incompetence. The author does not take sides (mostly).

We see the headlines and infographics of terror attacks, genocides and other tragedies. This book goes behind the scenes and asks pertinent questions and points out coverups and blunders.

Some of the topics covered in the book are the 26/11 terror attacks, Malegaon blasts, Gujarat riots, murders, fake encounters, Kashmir, Kandahar hijack and so on.

One major issue with this book is the chapter on IPKF in Sri Lanka. The author seems somewhat sympathetic to the IPKF and tut-tuts about the mess it 'suffered', and completely ignores the atrocities committed by it on Tamil civilians.

Two other things: the author's digressions …

reviewed Panpattu Asaivukal by T. Paramasivan

T. Paramasivan: Panpattu Asaivukal (Paperback, Tamil language, 2017) 4 stars

Accessible cultural history

5 stars

Did you know that before chilli came to Tamil Nadu from Chile in the 15th century, Tamils used black pepper? கருமிளகு was called curry (கறி) and later came to mean meat because it was more often used to make meat spicy. Tho. Paramasivan's பண்பாட்டு அசைவுகள் is filled with such fascinating nuggets of history and more.

This is a book of short, riveting essays digging into the origins of various aspects of Tamil culture and everything that has to do with it. It's two short books published as one, அறியப்படாத தமிழகம் & தெய்வங்களும் சமூக மரபுகளும். It's a steal.

'Tho.Pa.', as he is called, has us spellbound with his erudition and insight. The first book, with shorter pieces, is filled with mind-blowing factoids, etymologies, anecdotes, interesting quotes, etc. He touches everything from salt and water, caste and weddings, language and rituals, farming and folklore, laws and beliefs, festivals and kings, and many …