Thursday, December 5, 2019

‘Money: A Suicide Note’ by Martin Amis

Money: A Suicide Note by Martin Amis is surely a benefactor of time, it has been one of the most well reviewed and well-written novels to come out of contemporary British literature, notwithstanding the lack of nomination for a Booker Prize. Money: A Suicide Note, it is a perfect title and the novel epitomises the title, in all its varieties and connotations. Some readers might be overwhelmed by the continuous rant, but it has to be there, the over surging multitudes of people, money, and debauchery to sicken and deviate from the conventional standards.

Money: A Suicide Note, is a novel, which rejects the conventional boundaries of literariness, and strives to become something more iconoclastic, reinventing literature to bring it to the modern epoch. A hilariously bone tickling masterpiece, that is morbid, embarrassing, occasionally disgusting but nonetheless, leaves the reader nothing short of, astonished and amazed.

Read review: https://bit.ly/33Q9XVB

Friday, November 29, 2019

An Artist of the Floating World by Kazuo Ishiguro

An Artist of the Floating World, has the dream-like taste of an Haiku or Hay(na)ku. It is the most reticent of Ishiguro’s novels, a sense of calmness hovers over his scenic imagination, character depth, and the spoken word. An Artist of the Floating World, is not, in the end as intoxicatingly heartbreaking as The Remains of The Day, or as emotionally disturbing as Never Let Me Go. Yet, An Artist of The Floating World is a novel which has beauty and regret percolating across all its pages, and paints an absolutely unforgettable dream-like landscape.

Read reviews - https://bit.ly/35F2ha2

Friday, November 22, 2019

One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel García Márquez

One Hundred Years of Solitude is a novel written by Gabriel García Márquez, published in the year 1967. It is one of the greatest progenitors of the modern magical realism, set in the fictional city of Macondo, tracing the lifeline of the generations of the Buendía family. The novel is perhaps the most significant work in the magical realism literary canon, and is embellished with a simple and musical prose, wrought with striking images, metaphors, symbols and allegories. The narrative is glazed with perhaps hundreds of swiftly moving anecdotes, passing in small spasms through the fleeting air, inducing a dream-like quality. It is very clear from the first paragraph, that Gabriel Garcia Marquez, is an original, one of his own kind. One Hundred Years of Solitude is one of the finest novels ever written, which between its covers, reflects and meditates upon the whole continent of human emotions that any heart has ever known. A landmark book. 
Read reviews: https://bit.ly/2Daxgi0

Wednesday, November 13, 2019

My Name Is Red by Orhan Pamuk

My Name Is Red is a murder mystery and philosophical art novel written by Nobel Prize winning writer Orhan Pamuk. My Name Is Red is the one which follows a very complex plot with a very large cast of characters who belong to different backgrounds, complex and deep and symbolic, unforgettable in a sense, I would say. My Name Is Red, is in totality a novel of the tensions between the east and the west which is wondrously explored through the eyes of artists gazing at miniatures and paintings. The novel has the structure and complexity of a labyrinth, because the moment the reader experiences a thunderous shock, Pamuk sets the stage for another and another, creating prisms of reality within reality, and interweaving stories within stories, creating a web of history, politics, social culture, romance and sexual intrigue. My Name Is Red is a beguiling portrait of art and the landscape of the east, which delights and haunts the reader in numerous guises of its marvellous characters.
Read full reviews: https://bit.ly/32KbVGw

Wednesday, November 6, 2019

The Enigma of Arrival by Sir V.S. Naipaul

The Enigma of Arrival by Sir V.S. Naipaul is a novel in five sections published in 1987 based on real life events of the writer during his time in Wiltshire and his recollections of the past, during his emigration to New York from Trinidad. This book cannot and should not be recognised as a novel, it is a piece of wonderful literature and brilliant prose writing, but to call it a novel is restricting and shallow of those who have labelled it. It is a real life work, in which Naipaul is the man inside, ensorcelling the reader with his benumbing and painful observations recorded in a prose which is extraordinary. The Enigma of Arrival is a deeply lonely and depraved book, a book which has scarcely any compassion, any colour or any reassurance. It is a solitary and dry book which brutally wounds the reader, profoundly diminishing with its lack of spring, all it has between its covers is the endless cycle of tension, loss, grief and mortality moving endlessly again and again until broken by death.
Read full reviews - https://bit.ly/34yEeZK

Friday, November 1, 2019

The God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy

The novel "The God of Small Things" is a heartbreaking, devastating and crushing portrayal of human lives that cling to small things when big things flow against the tide, and how small things break the human heart more than the big things in life. The book expands the moral landscape of dilemmas and stands as an iconoclastic work, heroic and courageous. A superb novel which a reader can never forget because of the sheer beauty of Roy’s characters, their feelings hanging on the slate of her lyrical prose, and how they fall and break so delicately like flowers crushed and squelched beneath the footsteps of leather-boots. A fragile and dark fairy tale of emotions. A must read.
Read full reviews: https://bit.ly/321HnQk

Tuesday, October 22, 2019

Amongst Women by John McGahern

Amongst Women by John McGahern is a novel published in the year 1990, shortlisted for the Booker Prize and has come to be recognised as one of the great Irish novels of our time. The novel has a simple plot encompassing a small cast of characters, of which most are women. Every character is endearing, dark and compassionate, constantly ever-changing as the sudden transformations in the physical landscape. In Amongst Women, the characters laugh, smile, revel in their naughtiness amidst the dark clouds hovering above them. This is the writing that breathes life into the dying fiction, and we need more voices like them to keep the blood flowing in the veins of prose. Amongst Women is one of the few triumphs of fiction that achieves greatness through its simplicity and original human voice. It is a book of a lifetime, go read it!
Read full reviews: https://bit.ly/2U7amzU

Wednesday, October 16, 2019

Voss by Patrick White

Voss is difficult and formidable, yet it also proves to be one of the greatest novels of our time. I might agree that some of the colonial adventures shown in the book might seem old-fashioned to the new readers, but I would say almost every sentence of this book is calculated and purposeful. Seldom there have been writers who have such a balanced command over liminal spaces in our psychological and physical horizons of nature. The novel rides astride on two boundaries enriching the story with movement. The words move like sharp darts across the fertile landscape to the bleakest thoughts of its memorable characters until they merge to create a mind-bending portrait of new realism.
Read full reviews: https://bit.ly/2U3C14K

Wednesday, October 9, 2019

Review of The Corrections

In my view, I never expected that a twenty-first century writer would have possessed such a great talent for characterisations and meditations on life. Writing had become more about the language, the theme and the idea of the world rather than the shameful emotional impulses of its characters. What differentiates this novel from its ancestral roots in Tolstoy, Mann and Dostoevsky, is the fact that its greatness doesn’t lie in its length, dimension or scale but the inner workings of the characters’ psychological mechanism. The Corrections by Jonathan Franzen pictures a small time period in their lives with flashes of memory similar to a collage, appreciating non-linearity over linearity of time and space which the characters inhabit. Read full reviews: https://bit.ly/2HmWeNC

Thursday, October 3, 2019

The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Diaz

The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Diaz is a tour de force which will make you laugh, smile and feel heartbroken at the way things happen to people and often happen to good people in life. The novel is superbly humorous yet devastatingly tragic; it makes the reader feel helpless, who is a spectator unable to do anything to pull out the characters from their pit of overwhelming unhappiness. Whatever happens to Oscar Wao is incredibly sad, yet the character himself is wonderfully written. The novel beautifully addresses other aspects of the first-person narration, for instance, the unreliability of the narrator. It is very difficult to differentiate between physical reality and the subjective psychological perception of it, which the characters are experiencing. https://bit.ly/2Zk29ZZ

Wednesday, September 25, 2019

Freedom by Jonathan Franzen

Freedom is a novel published in the year 2010 by American novelist Jonathan Franzen. Freedom is an extremely progressive, innovative and contemplative novel which meditates upon the notion of liberty and the harmful nature of it, the struggles that liberty entails, and non-redemptive decisions hewn out of free will which lead human beings to both destroy themselves and their surroundings. It has a feel-and-texture of classic dystopian novels except that this is a modern realist family novel with uncountable sexual jokes and dark humour that typical Franzen fans will gush over. https://bit.ly/2z9x00V

Wednesday, September 18, 2019

Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe

Things Fall Apart is a novel by Chinua Achebe published in the year 1958 to great acclaim and since then, has been recognised as a classic of postcolonial literature. Things Fall Apart is a remarkable novel, which manages to be persuasive and intricate enough to dazzle the readers. It is also a novel which should be taught in universities and schools as an important tale of postcolonialism which, in my view, would educate the readers more than the non-fictional accounts. Chinua Achebe should be read for the sole reason that he has given voice to a whole generation of brilliant African writers and we, as readers, should forever be indebted to him. https://bit.ly/2Zcclb7

Thursday, September 12, 2019

The Cairo Trilogy by Naguib Mahfouz

The Cairo Trilogy is a series of three novels written and published by the Nobel prize winner for literature Naguib Mahfouz, initially in the Arabic language in the years 1956-1957. The three books: Palace Walk (1956), Palace of Desire (1957) and Sugar Street (1957) were published later in English translation in the 1990s by Doubleday. This novel is a masterpiece from the beginning to the end. It is a book to cherish and live through. https://bit.ly/33Fv26k 

Thursday, September 5, 2019

A Heart So White by Javier Marías

A Heart So White by Javier Marías is a novel published, originally in the Spanish language, in the year 1992. In the year 1995, an English translation by Margaret Jull Costa was published by The Harvill Press, which won the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award. The book is structurally, narratively and psychologically flawless and faultless in its portrayal of an elusive puzzle of sex, love and morality, the art of listening, remembering, existence and passage of time. https://bit.ly/2YPiYjt

Friday, August 23, 2019

Stoner by John Williams

Stoner is a masterpiece by John Williams, a breath-taking journey which will shatter many hearts yet reassure the ones stricken with misfortune and pain with its beautiful melody, transfigured into eternal music of life by smooth and compassionate writing. This book is a sure reminder of how much the world can take away from us, yet it also surprises the gentle reader by exposing how much the world still has to offer despite the broken pieces of life sprawling in endless waves of debris; the music still weaves its magic across the boundaries of pain and turmoil. https://bit.ly/2YTnptE

Saturday, August 17, 2019

Pale Fire by Vladimir Nabokov

Pale Fire by Vladimir Nabokov is a brilliant novel which showcases Nabokov’s calculative prowess in terms of composing novels of dramatic intensity and invention while retaining the traditional powers of recurring motifs of classical literature. It is a testimony to brilliant literature and also, in my view, a love letter to the genres we have come to love over the years and the writers we have devoured for generations and would do so for further generations to come. https://bit.ly/2Ks9mly 

Friday, August 9, 2019

The Unbearable Lightness of Being by Milan Kundera

The Unbearable Lightness of Being is a novel which is written by Milan Kundera in the year 1984. The book has been recognised as a ‘masterpiece’ and a ‘modern classic’. The story of the novel revolves around two men, two women and a dog. The plot of the story is simple : Franza, Tomas, Sabina, Tereza and karenin (dog) ; all these characters come together to create an undefinable tale of human emotions. The writer pours his heart out on the paper. The Unbearable Lightness of Being is the book of a lifetime: one which makes the dear reader wish to live longer. https://bit.ly/2T8vOUD