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Showing posts from May, 2021

Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguru [Book review]

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  Title: Never Let Me Go Author: Kazuo Ishiguru     Pretty much the only novel that brought me to tears. I loved it. Having said that, it is still not a patch on the work of George Orwell and Aldous Huxley that, I believe, rule(s) the domain of modern dystopian literature. Post Orwell’s Animal Farm  (1945) and Nineteen Eighty Four  (1949) and Huxley’s Brave New World (1932), I find most dystopian scenarios - both in novels and onscreen - to be regurgitations under some guise or the other. Aside from Ishiguru’s work, the only other novel that somewhat stood out was Margaret Atwood’s A Handmaiden’s Tale (1985). Rather than tackling the entire civilizational structure (which was already masterfully handled by both Huxley and Orwell), both Atwood and Ishiguru mostly tweak a particular aspect of society. For Atwood, it was the role of women in society being streamlined along titillating lines. In his work, Ishiguru tackles the notion of humanness, by focusi...

The Profane by Satyajit Sarna [A collection of poems] [Review]

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Title: The Profane Poet: Satyajit Sarna   The Profane: An Intriguing Hand Imagine that you are at a Taash scene(1) i.e., Teen-Patti (a type of 3-card-poker), and The Profane by Satyajit Sarna is the hand that can both tackle, and, if need be, assimilate the joker in the variation. It begins innocuously enough: the cards/poems are dealt. As you begin to go through them, one realizes that this hand can meet anything dealt across the table. The final outcome of course depends on the skill and the discretion of the player.           The Waterfall: a type of variation in taash known for its flipping jokers. This collection of poems appear to revolve around the perceptions of the millennial. Sarna's observations are, at points, soothingly savage and delightfully vicious.  The common theme cutting across each poem is that Sarna says the things that are considered taboo by many and are, well, usually artfully ignored for the “greater good” of “society”, ...