Indian Readers discussion
READING PROGRESS 2017
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dely in 2017: books and challenges


visited 17 states (48.5%)
Create your own visited map of India or Amsterdam travel guide for Android
States:
Andhra Pradesh
Arunachal Pradesh
Assam
Bihar: India: A Wounded Civilization
Chhattisgarh
Delhi:
The Wildings
Delhi
Midnight's Children by Salman Rushdie
Goa: Around India in 80 Trains by Monisha Rajesh
Gujarat:
The Algebra Of Infinite Justice
Il libro di Krishna
Haryana: Jaya: An Illustrated Retelling of the Mahabharata
Himachal Pradesh: Nine Lives
Jammu e Kashmir: Kashmir Saivism - The Central Philosophy of Tantrism
Jharkhand
Karnataka:
India. Cinque racconti, sei reportage, tre fumetti
Waiting for the Mahatma by R.K. Narayan
Kerala: Idris : Keeper of the Light
Madhya Pradesh:
Five Past Midnight in Bhopal: The Epic Story of the World's Deadliest Industrial Disaster
Un'isola di mistero : seguito delle avventure di viaggio di Dalle caverne e dalle giungle dell'Indostan
Maharashtra:
Sacred Games
Behind the Beautiful Forevers: Life, Death, and Hope in a Mumbai Undercity
Saturday Date
The Moor's Last Sigh
Manipur
Meghalaya
Mizoram
Nagaland
Orissa: eFiction India Vol. 1 Issue 07
Punjab: Train to Pakistan
Rajasthan: India Was One
Sikkim
Tamil Nadu:
Shilappadikaram
The Toss of a Lemon
Tripura
Uttar Pradesh:
Sea of Poppies
Krsna: The Supreme Personality of Godhead: v. 1
Uttarakhand
West Bengal:
Freedom at Midnight
The City of Joy
The Sleeping Dictionary
Sister of My Heart
The Missionary Position: Mother Teresa in Theory and Practice
The Lives of Others
India without a real setting:
Kamasutra
71 Golden Tales of Panchatantra
A Fine Balance
L'Induismo
Timeless wisdom from ancient India
The Dance of Siva: Essays on Indian Art and Culture
The Difficulty of Being Good: On the Subtle Art of Dharma

My previous year: https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
1) Pene d'amore di una gatta inglese e altri racconti felini

My previous year: https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
2017:
7) Faust, Part Two by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
read 22/06/2017

Sensible idea to add in one thread itself. :)"
Also because I have always less time and in 2016 it was hard to update both my discussions.
Good luck Dely.
Loooooved the far and wide challenge idea!
And lovely book suggestions against them. Will pick a few of them from your list and as usual keep lurking :)
Loooooved the far and wide challenge idea!
And lovely book suggestions against them. Will pick a few of them from your list and as usual keep lurking :)

Loooooved the far and wide challenge idea!
And lovely book suggestions against them. Will pick a few of them from your list and as usual keep lurking :)"
Thanks!

You have to tell me. I'm curious!

I shall always be lurking for more.
Happy reading! :)

I shall always be lurking for more.
Happy reading! :)"
Thanks! I think Kafka can wait a little bit more, but Gurcharan Das will be read hopefully in January.

Cider House rules"
The Wildings isn't that good. I rated it only with 2 stars.
Wont' wait too much to read Cider House Rules.

1)

There isn't an English translation of this book but I recommend it to who knows Italian and that want to know about Saint Francis and why after his death all the papers about him disappeared and there was only one official biography that wasn't trustful. After a lot of years the original papers written by his confreres could be found so they started writing new and trustful biographies. Very interesting, above all the historical background and how things worked in the Francisan Order.
Italian review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
1) Books I own Challenge
Was in my to-read list since December 2016, read 3th January 2017.


English edition: Cathedral by Raymond Carver
I enjoyed these short stories and Carver's writing style. All these stories deal with less important moments in life, or moments that don't seem important to us, but at the end they are. There aren't great happenings, but the reader is put in the story when things already happened. The many themes of these stories are: loneliness, divorce, alcoholism, loss of a job.
2) Books I Own Challenge
Was in my to-read list since December 2016, read 06/01/2017.

But on a yearly basis you usually read more books than me. It seems you still have to warm up :D


It could have been also a 5* if it wouldn't have been a bit dragging towards the end. The title says it all: it's about dharma in the Mahabharata, a book I love so I also like to read about it.
My English review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

1) Indian Challenge
3) Books I own challenge
It was in my to read list since September 2017, read 21/01/2017.


I rate the book despite I didn't finish it. It's by an emerging Italian author and it was really badly written, it was impossible to follow the author's thoughts. You are lucky there isn't an English translation of this book.
My only Italian review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Last year I had been lucky with Italian indie authors, so I tried to give also this one a try because I liked the book blurb....meh! I have to be careful.


English edition: The Cider House Rules by John Irving
I really liked the first part but then there was no development in the characters. They behaved the same way from the beginning till the end, and the whole story lasts at least 30 years. It isn't believable, it isn't real that people never change and always say and behave the same way. I wanted to rate it with 1* but seen that I liked the first part and seen that I was able to finish it, I decided for 2*.
My short English review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Also part of my Books I Own Challenge. 4th book of the list. It was in my to-read list since January 2016.


It's a non-fiction about economics. It was really very interesting and well written and it's a pity it hasn't been translated into English
The author explains how companies have to put at the center of their economy the consumer but not only as a consumer, but as a human being. He wants an economy based on universal values and ideals that stops thinking only about its profit, but has to do also the profit of the consumer and the enviroment. He talks a lot about his own experience, about why and how a person has to change in order to be a better person not only for himself but for society.
The author isn't a dreamer, but he is a management director of one of the biggest banks in Italy and if I don't go wrong he founded also a Corporate University.
Really very very interesting. I loved it.
I have written only an Italian review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Looks very interesting. And tempting. Generally the "human being" part and introspection about human nature as a consumer isn't found easily in such non-fiction business and entrepreneur related books.

Exactly so I was also glad to read that they are understanding that they have to think at the consumer as a human being and not only a "profit" for them. I liked above all the part dedicated to how and why people have to change. Not only managers and leaders, but also common people with whatever job they do. They have to do it not only for the salary, but as a mission. Seen that a real change can't arrive only from people or from politicians, companies have an important rule in changing society in a better way because they are midway.
That struck many a chords within me. Wish it was available in English. Or better yet wish I could read it in Italian.

Maybe someday, who knows. It has been published only in 2016.
I have seen right now that his blog is also in English!
http://www.oscardimontigny.it/en/

You are welcome! On his blog he synthesizes his philosophy and if you read here and there you know what the book is about.
I have watched also some videos (that with Patch Adams and Simona Atzori, the dancer without arms) and it's really encouraging and motivating: everyone can change becoming a better person and everyone can do something for a better society.


No English edition. It's a book about brigandage in Italy after the unification of Italy (1861). It's fiction though all the dates and characters are real and accurate.
I have written only an Italian review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
5th book of my Books I Own Challenge. Was in my to-read list since January 2016.

For me 2* means that it was ok. It isn't a book I would throw out of the window, but I also didn't like it that much because of the language. It seems more children literature, the language was too simplistic. It was also full of grammar mistakes and typos.


I thought this book talked about some nice and edifying verses of the Gospels but I was so wrong! The author explains some verses and events with his very personal interpretation. It was so forced and often also totally non-sense.
I have written only an Italian review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

9)

English edition: The Perennial Philosophy by Aldous Huxley
It is an interesting book but I rated it only with 3 stars because it was really difficult, both the style and the language. But despite this I would recommend it to people who are interested in the philosophical and spiritual side of religions. It talks about the philosophy and the spiritual side that are very similar if not the same in the main religions (Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, Buddhism, Taosim).
My short English review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

I thought you were too bored to update the thread.
Glad to see you back. :)"
Lol
It was such a tough book that I could read only a few pages per day. In the meantime I also started reading the complete collection of fables by Hans Christian Andersen to satisfy my daily longing for "normal" reading.

10)

There isn't an English edition. It's a collection of short stories by famous authors like Honoré de Balzac, Edgar Allan Poe, Mark Twain etc, where cats are the main characters.
The stories were all good, some better some less but there weren't stories I didn't like.
Also part of my Cat Challenge.


No English edition. It's a non-fiction about refugees, about the various wars around the world, or countries with a precarious working life, that lead people to flee from their countries.
The book is very well done. After an interesting introduction where the editors analyze all the numbers (how many people flee, how many die during these trips, from which countries, the importance for Europe of all these immigrants, etc), every chapter is dedicated to a different route. The most important are those that start from Africa, cross the Mediterranean Sea to arrive in Sicily or however South Italy.
There aren't only Africans who flee, but also people from Bangladesh, Syria, Irak, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and they usually arrive to Africa (above all Libia) and try there to cross the sea.
But there are also other routes: from the East to Turkey, Greece, the Balkans and then North Italy or Austria. Others who flee from Ukraine or Moldova do another route. There are also many people from South America that had to flee because of the collapse of the economical system of their countries.
All those people are linked because they flee from countries where life has become impossible if not dangerous because of wars.
At the end of every chapter there are real stories told by people who had to afford this trip and these stories are really shocking and moving.
It is a book that those little stinky fascists and racists should read but also leaders of countries that want to build wars. But leaders of capitalistic countries are usually the culprits of these many wars because they want to have control over those countries rich of oil, natural gases or because they are in a strategic position. Every chapter analyzes also the reasons of these wars or how people are exploited.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Complete Fairy Tales (other topics)A New Earth: Awakening to Your Life's Purpose (other topics)
The story of a humble Christian (other topics)
The Neverending Story (other topics)
The story of a humble Christian (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Hans Christian Andersen (other topics)Ignazio Silone (other topics)
Eckhart Tolle (other topics)
Michael Ende (other topics)
Ignazio Silone (other topics)
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I will have the same challenges as during the last years.