Monday, February 28, 2011

FROM : GUARDIAN
PHOTO : www.guardianbookshop.co.uk




It was the biggest leak in history. WikiLeaks infuriated the world's greatest superpower, embarrassed the British royal family and helped cause a revolution in Africa.












The man behind it was Julian Assange, one of the strangest figures ever to become a worldwide celebrity. Was he an internet messiah or a cyber-terrorist? Information freedom fighter or sex criminal? The debate would echo around the globe as US politicians called for his assassination.

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Sunday, February 27, 2011

FROM : THE HINDU
PHOTO : www.hindu.com

A deadly scourge

N. GOPAL RAJ

A highly readable account of how ideas about cancer and ways to treat it evolved over time



THE EMPEROR OF ALL MALADIES - A Biography of Cancer: Siddhartha Mukherjee; Fourth Estate, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers, A 53, Sector 57, Noida-201301. Rs. 499.

This book provides a panoramic view of humanity's fight against a deadly scourge. Cancer has plagued human beings down the ages. As people's lifespan lengthened and they became less likely to fall victim to infectious diseases, it emerged as a major killer in both rich and poor countries. One in eight deaths worldwide is now caused by cancer.




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Saturday, February 26, 2011

The outsider’s insights on the American soul.

FROM : STANDARD
PHOTO : GOOGLE IMAGES




The Genteel Tradition in American Philosophy’ AND Character and Opinion in the United States

by George Santayana

edited by James Seaton

Yale, 240 pp., $16

The Highpriest of Pessimism

Zur Rezeption Schopenhauers in den USA

by Christa Buschendorf

Universitätsverlag Winter, 336 pp., 42 euros

A hundred years ago the philosopher and aesthete George Santayana traveled to Berkeley to recuperate “among her immense forces,” the mountains, forests, and Pacific surf, from the arid flatlands of Harvard’s intellectual conformism.


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Monday, February 21, 2011

Scott Brown memoir

FROM : CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR
PHOTO : www.csmonitor.com

Scott Brown memoir details childhood abuse and a life of hardship

Scott Brown's new autobiography "Against All Odds" may add to his "political intrigue."






If you thought the Cosmo centerfold was edgy, hold on tight, Senator Scott Brown’s got more to share. Another political bombshell is set to hit a bookshelf near you.

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Sunday, February 20, 2011

FROM : THE HINDU

PHOTO :www.hindu.com

India's march to freedom

SURANJAN DAS

The year 1941 saw the hardening of the nationalist and imperialist standpoints in Indian politics


TOWARDS FREEDOM 1941 - Part-1: Edited by Amit K. Gupta and Arjun Dev; Oxford University Press, YMCA Building, Jai Singh Road, New Delhi-110001. Rs. 3750.

This volume is another significant addition to the Towards Freedom series, an initiative for publishing documents on the freedom movement from an Indian perspective. In his perceptive introduction, Sabyasachi Bhattacharya underlines how 1941, although less eventful than the years preceding and succeeding it, saw the hardening of the nationalist and imperialist standpoints in Indian politics, which set the stage for the “tumultuous” 1942.

Amit Gupta and Arjun Dev have, diligently and adroitly, brought together a wide range of materials related to some constituents that gave 1941 an element of criticality in India's march to freedom.

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Saturday, February 19, 2011

Use value

FROM : The New Criterion
Photo : Google


Use value

by Barton Swaim

A review of A Dictionary of Modern English Usage: The Classic First Edition (Oxford World's Classics) by H. W. Fowler


The third edition of the work of the brilliant and cantankerous Englishman H. W. Fowler’s Dictionary of Modern English Usage, published in 1996, signaled the triumph of the descriptivist view of language—the view, that is, that the lexicographer’s duty is merely to describe the language as it’s used, not to make pronouncements about how it ought to be used. It also signaled the triumph of tedium over enjoyment, and of abstract truth over utility. Edited by the late R. W. Burchfield, The New Fowler’s Modern English Usage, as the third edition was titled, addressed all the significant questions about English grammar and usage and explained with sufficient clarity the ways in which those questions have been addressed in the past.

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Friday, February 18, 2011

Elegy for Raymond

FROM : Bookforum
PHOTO :http://bookforum.com

Elegy for Raymond

A renowned author finds that art is poor consolation in a time of crippling grief

Ruth Franklin


In early 2008, Joyce Carol Oates gave a talk called "The Writer's (Secret) Life: Woundedness, Rejection, and Inspiration," about how writers go about transmuting painful life experiences into art. At the heart of her speech was a quote from Hemingway, which Oates found so profound that she cited it twice. "From things that have happened . . . and from all things that you know and all those you cannot know, you make something through your invention that is not a representation but a whole new thing truer than anything true and alive, and you make it alive, and if you make it well enough, you give it immortality," he wrote. "That is why you write and for no other reason."


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Guardian recommends View all

To Kill A Mockingbird

To Kill A Mockingbird
by Harper Lee
RRP: £20.42
Offer Price: £16.33
You save: £4.09
Under Milk Wood

Under Milk Wood
by
RRP: £13.00
Pleasures of the Garden

Pleasures of the Garden
by Christina Hardyment
RRP: £16.99
Offer Price: £13.59
You save: £3.40
Bad Birdwatcher's Companion

Bad Birdwatcher's Companion
by Simon Barnes
RRP: £16.99
Offer Price: £13.59
You save: £3.40

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Lasting Man

FROM : The NEW REPUBLIC
PHOTO : www.tnr.com


Saul Bellow: Letters
Edited by Benjamin Taylor
(Viking, 571 pp., $35)

How easy it is, and plausible, to regard a collection of letters spanning youth and old age as an approximation of autobiography: the procession of denizens who inhabit a life, the bit players with their entrances and exits, the faithful chronology of incidents—all turn up reliably in either form, whether dated and posted or backward-looking. Yet autobiography, even when ostensibly steeped in candor, tends toward reconsideration—if not revisionary paperings-over, then late perspectives, afterwords, and second thoughts. Whereas letters (but here let us specify a writer’s letters) are appetite and urgency, unmediated seizures of impulse and desire torn from the fraught and living moment

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Paperback nonfiction

1. The Big Short
By Michael Lewis. W.W. Norton.

2. Inside of a Dog
By Alexandra Horowitz. Scribner.

3. Just Kids
By Patti Smith. Ecco.

4. The Financial Crisis Inquiry Report
By Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission. PublicAffairs.

5. Zeitoun
By Dave Eggers. Vintage.

6. What the Dog Saw
By Malcolm Gladwell. Back Bay.

7. Blink (tie)
By Malcolm Gladwell. Back Bay.

7. Eat, Pray, Love
By Elizabeth Gilbert. Penguin.

8. The Tipping Point
By Malcolm Gladwell. Back Bay.

9. Citizen Somerville
By Bobby Martini and Elayne Keratsis. Powderhouse.

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

For a Little Room Behind the Shop

From : The AMERICAN INTEREST
Photo : Google Image



How to Live: A Life of Montaigne in One Question and Twenty Attempts at An Answer
by Sarah Bakewell
Chatto & Windus, 2010, 387 pp., $26.88

Can a retired 16th-century French provincial magistrate teach us how to live today? Sarah Bakewell’s engaging and idiosyncratic biography of the great essayist Michel de Montaigne suggests that the answer, in some quite subtle and interesting ways, is that he can. To judge by the enthusiastic reviews and healthy sales for Bakewell’s book since it was published in Britain early last year and this past October in the United States, many critics and readers would seem to agree

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1
6.99
2Ragged Trousered Philanthropists
Robert Tressell
3To a Mountain in Tibet
Colin Thubron
4Eyewitness Decade
Roger Tooth
5Henry's Demons
Henry Cockburn
6Thirties
Juliet Gardiner
7Treasure Islands
Nicholas Shaxson
8How to Change the World
Eric Hobsbawm
9Ragged Trousered Philanthropists
Robert Tressell
10CCCP
Frederic Chaubin

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Mistresses through the ages

From : The sunday Time
Photo : Google Images


Mistresses through the ages

Prostitute, concubine, mistress, wife: the boundaries are blurred in this study


What is a mistress? Elizabeth Abbott, who has also published A History of Celibacy and held the post of Dean of Women at Trinity College, University of Toronto, offers this definition: “a woman voluntarily or forcibly engaged in a relatively long-term sexual relationship with a man who is usually married to another woman”. Given the persistence of this model across time and cultures, Abbott maintains that “mistressdom”, like celibacy, is therefore an essential means by which to consider sexual relationships outside marriage – “in fact, an institution parallel and complementary to marriage”. Considering the media’s current obsession with love-rat footballers and cheating celebs, “mistressdom” might also be considered a safe bet for a publisher’s list, and Abbott duly provides us with a generally cheerful tumble through adultery down the ages.

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TOP:

Hardcover fiction

1. The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest
By Stieg Larsson. Knopf.

2. Freedom
By Jonathan Franzen. Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

3. Catching Fire
By Suzanne Collins. Scholastic

4. Swamplandia! (tie)
By Karen Russell. Knopf.

4. Solo
By Rana Dasgupta. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.

5. Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Ugly Truth (tie)
By Jeff Kinney. Amulet.

5. Great House
By Nicole Krauss. W.W. Norton.

6. The Fates Will Find Their Way
By Hannah Pittard. Ecco.

7. The Death Instinct
By Jed Rubenfeld. Riverhead.

8. While Mortals Sleep
By Kurt Vonnegut. Delacorte.

Monday, February 14, 2011

David Ulin's favorite books of 2010

From : Los Angeles Times

Photo : www.latimes.com

David Ulin's favorite books of 2010

FAVORITE BOOKS

Here, in alphabetical order by title, are the 10 books that, over the last 12 months, most moved, inspired or beguiled me: my favorite books of 2010.

"About a Mountain" by John D'Agata (W.W. Norton: 236 pp., $23.95). Willfully blurring the line between reportage and essay, truth and construction, this beautiful book uses the saga of Yucca Mountain, nuclear waste and the history of Las Vegas to frame a searing meditation on uncertainty and time.


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Sunday, February 13, 2011

Politics of ethnonationalism

From : The Hindu
Photo : www.hindu.com

Politics of ethnonationalism

K. N. PANIKKAR

This work, a collection of essays, focusses on major sites of ethnonational politics



ETHNONATIONALISM IN INDIA - A Reader: Edited by Sanjib Barua; Oxford University Press, YMCA Building, Jai Singh Road, New Delhi-110001. Rs. 995.

John Stuart Mill in his celebrated essay, Considerations on Representative Government, had advanced the view that democracy is “next to impossible” in multiethnic societies and completely impossible in linguistically divided countries. By this yardstick, Indian democracy is a prime candidate for collapse. Nevertheless, it has survived, even if not ideally, as a puzzle for all those who expected the doom, particularly because ethnic discontent and violence have been endemic since the inception of the Republic. The essays brought together in this collection seek to solve this puzzle.



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Saturday, February 12, 2011

Beyond the Crash

From : The Gurardian¸
Photo : www.guardianbookshop.co.uk




Beyond the Crash

RRP £19.00

Our price: £15.20



The much-anticipated book from former British Prime Minister Gordon Brown about the global economic crisis and the way forward


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Guardian recommends View all >>

Under Milk Wood

Under Milk Wood
by
RRP: £13.00
To Kill A Mockingbird

To Kill A Mockingbird
by Harper Lee
RRP: £20.42
Offer Price: £16.33
You save: £4.09
Paddington Here and Now

Paddington Here and Now
by
RRP: £11.99
Offer Price: £9.59
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Friday, February 11, 2011

An Anthology of African American Sermons

From : Powell`s Books
Photo : www.powells.com



Preaching with Sacred Fire: An Anthology of African American Sermons, 1750 to the Present



Black Christianity has always had an ambiguous relationship to American culture. If African slaves grew to embrace Christianity, they did so in their own way: hallowing Exodus and wondering, "If God delivered Daniel, why not every man?" Thus was born the amalgam "Afro-Christianity" -- a universalistic faith drenched in particularity. The "Africanness" was a matter of style, too, given in moan and shout, which often led whites to view black religion as exotically emotional. Even Martin Luther King Jr. was known to recoil at the sight of a preacher "jumping out" and "screaming with his tune."


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This week's bestsellers

1
6.99

2Eyewitness Decade
Roger Tooth
3How to Change the World
Eric Hobsbawm
4Henry's Demons
Henry Cockburn
5Ragged Trousered Philanthropists
Robert Tressell
6To a Mountain in Tibet
Colin Thubron
7Jerusalem
Simon Montefiore
8Thirties
Juliet Gardiner
9Treasure Islands
Nicholas Shaxson
10Ragged Trousered Philanthropists
Robert Tressell

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Library cuts 'would make Britain more illiterate'

From : The TELEGRAPH
Photo : www.telegraph.co.uk


Gruffalo creator Julia Donaldson has criticised plans to close public libraries

Library cuts 'would make Britain more illiterate'


Leading children's author Julia Donaldson - whose books include The Gruffalo - spoke out in support of Saturday's Day Of Action to campaign against the closure of public libraries throughout Britain.

Donaldson, 62, who protested outside the Scottish parliament on Saturday, has warned that library closures would lead to a more "illiterate population".




TOP :


Paperback fiction

1. The Imperfectionists
By Tom Rachman. Dial.

2. Little Bee
By Chris Cleave. Simon & Schuster.

3. Cutting for Stone
By Abraham Verghese. Vintage.

4. Tinkers
By Paul Harding. Bellevue.

5. Major Pettigrew's Last Stand
By Helen Simonson. Random House.

6. The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (tie)
By Stieg Larsson. Vintage.

6. The Girl Who Played with Fire
By Stieg Larsson. Vintage.

7. Water For Elephants (tie)
By Sara Gruen. Algonquin.

7. The Hunger Games
By Suzanne Collins. Scholastic.

8. True Grit
By Charles Portis. Overlook.


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Wednesday, February 09, 2011

Wherever Home May Be

From : The Wall Street Journal
Photo : Google


Elizabeth Bishop was a restless, searching writer whose poems are rich in the wonder of being human

One hundred years after her birth in Worcester, Mass., in 1911, Elizabeth Bishop stands as the most highly regarded American poet of the second-half of the 20th century. She is admired in every critical camp—from feminists to formalists—who agree on little else. Her work also attracts a wide general readership. Taught and studied in high schools and universities, Bishop is, for the time being at least, the most popular woman poet in American literature after Emily Dickinson.

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Top :

Hardcover fiction

1. Freedom
By Jonathan Franzen. Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

2. The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest
By Stieg Larsson. Knopf.

3. Room
By Emma Donoghue. Little, Brown.

4. Tick Tock
By James Patterson and Michael Ledwidge. Little, Brown.

5. To the End of the Land
By David Grossman. Knopf.

6. The Inner Circle (tie)
By Brad Meltzer. Grand Central.

6. Gryphon: New and Selected Stories
By Charles Baxter. Pantheon.

7. The Red Garden (tie)
By Alice Hoffman. Crown.

7. Under Current Conditions
By Kyle Darcy. PublishingWorks.

8. Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Ugly Truth

Monday, February 07, 2011

John Gross

From : THE TIMES
Photo :http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk

John Gross

John Gross, 1935–2011

The literary life of the editor who ended the practice of anonymous reviewing in the TLS


John Gross, who died this week, was Editor of the TLS from 1974 to 1981, and a contributor to the paper from 1960 (when he reviewed J. D. Salinger’s For Esmé – with Love and Squalor) until last year (when he reviewed Dancing in the Dark: A cultural history of the Great Depression by Morris Dickstein). His books include The Rise and Fall of the Man of Letters: Aspects of English literary life since 1800 (1969), The Oxford Book of Aphorisms (1983), Shylock: Four hundred years in the life of a legend (1992), A Double Thread: A childhood in Mile End – and beyond (2001) and The Oxford Book of Parodies (published last year, and reviewed in the TLS by Seamus Perry).
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Sunday, February 06, 2011

J.D. Salinger

From : SLATE
PHOTO : www.slate.com

J. D. Salinger: A Life. By Kenneth Slawenski

For Salinger, With Love

Kenneth Slawenski's biography offers a bowdlerized life.

Where were you when J.D. Salinger died on Jan. 27, 2010? I can never forget: I was on the campus of William & Mary, trying to get a little work done before teaching my class, but people kept calling and e-mailing to ask whether I'd write Salinger's biography now that he was finally dead. The possibility had occurred to me (having published a biography of John Cheever, another New Yorker chronicler of postwar middle-class malaise), but only if I could get the family's approval in the form of a legally binding agreement.


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Saturday, February 05, 2011

THE TELL-TALE BRAIN

From : The Hindu
Photo : www.hindu.com

Ape and super ape

VIJAY NAGASWAMI

Ramachandran starts off with a description of the anatomy of the human brain with emphasis on cerebral cortices


THE TELL-TALE BRAIN - Unlocking the Mystery of Human Nature: V.S. Ramachandran; Random House India, MindMill Corporate Tower, 2nd Floor, Plot No. 24A, Sector 16A, Noida-201301. Rs. 499.

An acclaimed neuroscientist, based in San Diego, Vilayanur S. Ramachandran has been much feted and awarded for his original work on the brain and cognitive processes. A reading of the Tell-tale Brain gives one an idea why he is as well regarded as he is.


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Friday, February 04, 2011

The Scrapbook of American Slavery

From : The ATLANTIC
Photo : www.theatlantic.com

The Scrapbook of American Slavery

The Scrap Applewoods Books book of American SlaveryIn 1862, the author Harriet Beecher Stowe visited the White House. When she was introduced to Abraham Lincoln, the six-foot-four president is supposed to have looked over his diminutive guest and asked, with a wry smile, "so this is the little lady who made this big war?"
In 1862, the author Harriet Beecher Stowe visited the White House. When she was introduced to Abraham Lincoln, the six-foot-four president is supposed to have looked over his diminutive guest and asked, with a wry smile, "so this is the little lady who made this big war?

In 1862, the author Harriet Beecher Stowe visited the White House. When she was introduced to Abraham Lincoln, the six-foot-four president is supposed to have looked over his diminutive guest and asked, with a wry smile, "so this is the little lady who made this big war?"

This remark, part of Stowe's family lore, may be apocryphal. What is unquestionably true is that her most famous work, Uncle Tom's Cabin, ignited a storm of controversy over its portrayal of slavery in the South when it was published in 1852. It strengthened the resolve of abolitionists, outraged Southerners who believed the novel depicted the "peculiar institution" in an unfair light, and introduced millions of Americans to the ugly particulars of a practice that they'd had little direct knowledge of. There are few novels in American history that have served as drivers of that history to the degree that has Uncle Tom's Cabin.

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TOP:

Paperback nonfiction

1. Just Kids
By Patti Smith. Ecco.

2. What the Dog Saw
By Malcolm Gladwell. Back Bay.

3. Inside of a Dog
By Alexandra Horowitz. Scribner.

4. The Checklist Manifesto
By Atul Gawande. Picador.

5. The Cello Suites
By Eric Siblin. Grove.

6. Eat, Pray, Love (tie)
By Elizabeth Gilbert. Penguin.

6. The Accidental Billionaires
By Ben Mezrich. Anchor.

7. Zeitoun
By Dave Eggers. Vintage.

8. Freakonomics
By Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner. Harper Perennial.

9. NurtureShock
By Po Bronson and Ashley Merryman. Twelve.

Source: Boston-area bookstores

Thursday, February 03, 2011

The Life and Legends

From : Jewish Review
Photo : www.jewishreviewofbooks.com


Simon Wiesenthal: The Life and Legends
by Tom Segev
Doubleday, 496 pp., $35

If there was anything in particular that prevented Simon Wiesenthal from becoming, after S.Y. Agnon, the second Jew from Buczacz to win a Nobel Prize, it was probably his relationship with Kurt Waldheim. Back in the 1960s, when he was Austria's foreign minister, Waldheim had helped Wiesenthal to defend himself against rumors spread by Communist bloc countries that he had been a Nazi collaborator during World War II.

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Last 24 hours

  1. 1. Haruki Murakami's 1Q84 due out in English in October
  2. 2. JD Salinger is best revealed in his work
  3. 3. Can philanthropy again come to the help of public libraries?
  4. 4. Reareading: Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro
  5. 5. After Tunisia: Alaa Abd El Fatah on Egypt

Wednesday, February 02, 2011

Philosophy as inspiration

From : The Economist
Photo : www.economist.com/

Examined Lives: From Socrates to Nietzsche. By James Miller. Farrar, Straus and Giroux; 432 pages; $28.

Aristotle and the quest for understanding

THE unexamined life is not worth living, or so Socrates famously told the jury at his trial. He neglected to mention that the examined life is sometimes not all that wonderful either. In 11 biographical sketches of thinkers who tried to tread in Socrates’s footsteps, plus one on Socrates himself, James Miller explores what it means to follow the philosophical calling. Much trouble and uncertainty seems to be the answer, and some of the most famous philosophers turn out not to be all that admirable or convincing, he finds. So can philosophy inspire a way of life? That is one question raised by Mr Miller, who teaches politics and liberal studies at the New School for Social Research in New York.



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1
20.00
2Wikileaks
David Leigh & Luke Harding
3Treasure Islands
Nicholas Shaxson
4Help!
Oliver Burkeman
5When I Am Playing With My Cat, How Do I Know She Is Not Play
Saul Frampton
6Stranger in the Mirror
Jane Shilling
7Emperor of All Maladies
Siddhartha Mukherjee
8Eyewitness Decade
Roger Tooth
9Cleopatra
Stacy Schiff
10How to Squeeze a Lemon

Tuesday, February 01, 2011

AN INTIMATE BIOGRAPHY OF 1.2 BILLION PEOPLE

From : Outlook
Photo : www.outlookindia.com

India: A Portrait—An Intimate Biography of 1.2 Billion People

The Cambridge economist Joan Robinson would often say that “whatever you can rightly say about India, the opposite is also true”. For a long time India was seen as poor and spiritual in the West even as the IITS and IIMS disgorged thousands of aspiring tycoons into Europe and America. The worldwide corporate hunt for new sources of profit has now created another one-dimensional image: India, we are now told, is rich and materialistic, briskly flattening the world, in Thomas Friedman’s indelible phrase.

Never mind that more desperately poor people—421 million—live in India today than in all of sub-Saharan Africa. The new western accounts of India speak of the magnates of Mumbai and Bangalore; they hail an India rising, finally, to the consumer capitalism that is apparently the summit of human civilisation, if not the terminus of history. India becomes in this 2.0 version a vibrantly democratic country full of confident tycoons, adventurous entrepreneurs and friendly English-speakers, which might even counterbalance China while assisting the economic recovery of the West.


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Hardcover fiction

1. Squirrel Seeks Chipmunk
By David Sedaris. Little, Brown.

2. Freedom
By Jonathan Franzen. Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

3. The Girl who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest
By Stieg Larsson. Knopf.

4. The Help
By Kathryn Stockett. Putnam.

5. Moonlight Mile
By Dennis Lehane. William Morrow.