Tuesday 4 February 2014

Reader Review - The Moon Wants To Be Spotless White

Book: The Moon Wants to Be Spotless White
Author: Priya Narayanan
Publisher: LeadStart Publishing
Genre: Children Section
Ratings: 4/5
ISBN: 9789381576342
Number of Pages: 46

Review Date: 4th February 2014
Review on behalf of - Priya Narayanan

My Ratings:4/5
Story Telling Style – 4.5/5
Characters – 5/5
Illustration – 5/5
Cover Page – 5/5

My Review:

This is a very nicely illustrated book in the Children Section of Readership.
The story s short, crisp and has the capability to hold the interest of the reader till the end.
A children's book should always come with a moral and that has been well portrayed here.
Author has created a story telling environment which will enable the child reader or the storyteller to visualize the beauty of nature and the way the story reaches the end.
There are mention of regular things that a child has to follow like waking up early, going to school and not leaving the house without permission and this very modestly creates a sense of responsibility in a child.
The illustrations are not very photographic and is more drawn and painted. It offers an artistic and realistic image to the children reader. They look more real with the day to day characters that are build in the story.

On the whole, This is a wonderful book to gift our children and the author has done a great job.

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/844172956

Bangalore or Bengal-Ore !!



It has been a while that I am discussing my stay stature in a cosmopolitan city, Bangalore.
The best one I heard today is that Bangalore should change its name to Bengal-ore.
Reason? 

“With the number of Bengali's who have migrated to thrive here, it no longer looks like a part of South India. It is more like a city in North India.” This is infuriating, especially when it comes from people who boast their certificates and positions in the organization that they work for. 

There are a few things that people; rather I would address them as natives from this land needs to know here.

India is not partitioned after Independence into 2 further parts – North India and South India. We are still one country with 28 states and 7 union territories. The official Language of union government of the Republic of India is Hindi and English. We are free to speak in our different mother tongues and are not obligated to learn our neighbor’s dialect. Residing in any state in this country does not involve signing of a verbal bond to learn to speak in the native language of the state and forget our own routes, festivals and upbringing. It is absolutely ones interest for new languages that can drive the necessity to learn.

When we relocate from a certain part of the country to another, we have an open mind to adopt and accept the changes coming by. So, it is not that we do not respect the ways, festivals and daily life of natives here, though there are surprising differences, we do adopt, appreciate and participate in such new ways of life. We welcome others to participate with us as well. Things are absurd for both when it comes to the point of view of an individual, but that never should turn up to be demeaning.

Just like any state below Madhya Pradesh is not Madras, similarly any state above Karnataka is not North India. India, if need be, for reference purposes can be addressed into the East-West-North-South of India.
We, the large crowd in Bangalore today are East Indians and NOT North Indians. Bengalis are not North Indians if anyone would want to be geographically correct.

Bengalis do not eat fish 3 times a day and they don’t swim in mustard oil. We are experimental and welcoming to world cuisine from Chinese, Lebanese, Italian or the yummy South Indian Meals. To be outright with my opinion here I must say that we have an enriched choice for everything. Be it good food, good dressing, literature, music, art, home décor and festivities. We are apt in vegetarian food as much as in non-vegetarian. It is, on the whole, not the classification of the food that we are bothered about; it is the fulfillment of our taste bud that stands to be more important.

We adorn our tea because we come from the place where the world gets their supply of tea from. We love your filter coffee as much. We might have a little bit of denominations when it comes to moving from porcelain to a steel glass, a bone chine to a steel plate, but we learn with time the ways of the place. We love different non-repetitive choices in the different lentils in our kitchen cabinets because that’s what our taste buds have matured with. 

We love sweets in variety because that’s what we have offered to the rest of the country, authenticity in sweets. 
We thoroughly enjoy your hot idlis but we also miss our “Hinger Kochuri”. Pani Poori is definitely not at its best here and we miss our street food too. 

 It is just the kind of different tastes we grow up with. Be it our kitchen cabinet, or our wardrobe, be it our bookshelves or our lamp shades, we are constantly experimental while the natives here like to stick to their best laid rules. Both are absolutely fine in their own ways. And there is a friendly word called Adaptability that can help us thrive well.

We are full of festivals and that too looks like an issue. It is more food than religion for us says the accuser. Again our motive is to have a good time. Eat, Pray and Love. We had 37 Durga Puja Pandals on record in this city in the year 2013. Surprisingly, there is every kind of people, irrespective to the language they speak visit and have a good time.

We are loud since we have a voice of our own. We voice our opinion since we have knowledge to back them up with data. We flaunt because we have things to flaunt. Our being down to earth is about welcoming people and showering them with feel good factor rather than treating them as an urban passerby.

We talk to our fellow Bengali's in English. Now that is an issue for you? We also talk in Bengali when we want to make sure that certain truths don’t hurt you. For the kindest information, our motive is to connect to the person we are trying to converse with, rather than making him/her uncomfortable in the crowd.

We are not migrants in Bangalore, we have relocated for the opportunity that this city has provided us. We have loved the city, did our part to generate revenue for the city and have made friends here. We have adapted to the ways this city operates, we pay the highest rent in this country to the greedy ones who do not step down to see what wrong they are doing. We pay unleashed price to the rickshaw and taxi drivers and yet we choose our best friends from here and look for happiness. We have chosen Bangalore as our 2nd home. We have fallen in love with Bangaloreans and settled in our splashy apartments to have a beautiful future. We have called ourselves home here, but not many from here have accepted us yet as their neighbors.