People, places and what triggers you to make faces

Wednesday, November 23, 2016

Saddest story I ever heard

There I was, doing what I do, checking into social media every 30 minutes (come on, there are more interesting people on Twitter than I've met my ENTIRE life), when I came across a YouTube comment that broke my heart. It was under a love scene from an interesting TV show, and this stranger wrote something on the lines of "I wish I was one of them, either one. But since I'm almost 80 years old, I guess that will never be. Young people don't seem to understand that sex is something older people can still be into. I'm on YouTube because I like the music I find, and for the porn."
I had to go and sit down for a while. Of course, young people will find the truth of what he said - if they live to be almost 80. They will also find the honesty to admit the truth in everything he said if they live to be almost 80. But I swear, it was the saddest slice of life I've heard in a long, long time.

Monday, November 21, 2016

Akshaya Mukul wins Shakti Bhatt prize


In its ninth year, the Shakti Bhatt First Book Prize 2016 has been won by Akshaya Mukul for his book “Gita Press and the Making of Hindu India”.

Judges and authors Samanth Subramanian, Mahesh Rao and Janice Pariat chose Mukul’s work for its “eye-opening and captivating exploration into a parallel literary culture that can often feel at a great remove from English-speaking metropolitan India.”

They added, “Mukul’s painstaking research tells the story of a publishing house in the Hindi heartland, which, through its output of religious texts and magazines, achieved enormous influence to become the vehicle of an intensely focused political project. The current overseers of that regrettable project – of Hindutva, or Hindu nationalism -- have only become bolder and more powerful, which makes "Gita Press" challenging, timely and provocative.

“Mukul's book was a highly original and commendable work
involving a dogged determination to set out the many particularities of the Gita Press and the colourful personalities that drove its agenda. It is also a book that is relevant to cultural homogenization across the ages, since at its heart it reveals what it takes to be a cultural mythmaker, and how a specific nexus of religious, caste and linguistic considerations have reaped extraordinary rewards.”

As shortlist judge, author Arshia Sattar said: “This year’s shortlist for the Shakti Bhatt First Book Prize reminds us that the diaspora is writing hard and writing well. Four of our selected writers live and work outside the sub-continent. But their exceptional work is counter-balanced by equally noteworthy books written within India. All the books this year should make us reconsider what we think we know but have either forgotten or not acknowledged: the long (and often sinister) shadows of particular events and people, the individual lives nestled inside large histories, lives that shimmer on the margins of our vision and as always, the darkness hidden inside families.”

Shortlist
Manu S Pillai The Ivory Throne
Madhu Gurung The Keeper of Memories
Sophia Khan Yasmeen
Nisid Hajari Midnight’s Furies
Akshay Mukul Gita Press and the Making of Hindu India
Kanishk Tharoor Swimmer Among the Stars

The Shakti Bhatt First Book Prize is a cash award of 2 lakh rupees, and a trophy.

It is funded by the Shakti Bhatt Foundation and Priti Paul through the Apeejay Trust.