Tuesday, December 23, 2014

Schindler's List by Thomas Keneally

As mentioned in The Pianist, the facts depicted in the novel itself is as powerful as it can get and the literature need not be really looked into. However, the book could have been written much more fluidly. At times, it gets hard to read through quickly. But, for the author's sake, one cannot imagine how else it can be written when so many folks' tales need to be intertwined at the same point in time. Excellently crafted, putting all true events together. Maybe it is the facts itself are so hard to digest that it makes reading difficult - with so many strange sounding cities, places, names, etc. Definitely, worth a read.

Sunday, October 19, 2014

Catching the Wolf of Wall Street

Not as good as the prequel but has as many good stories and written just as well as it's sibling. This novel though quite fills in all the gaps of the first one (like how was Stratton Oakmont started, how Jordan got into Wall Street, etc.). The movie has taken inputs from both of these books to fully depict the story of Jordan. Still, a page-turner no doubt!

Sunday, September 7, 2014

The Wolf of Wall Street

Wow! What a book! Unbelievable true stories of Jordan Belfort. I remember reading so many novels in a James Bond style which made sense in just as a fictitious manner but never in true-life style and yet, Jordan lived that life style. His humorous wit, and the way he explains everything with a beautiful narration makes the book a compulsive page-turner. Absolutely loved it! I am now reading the sequel Catching the Wolf of Wall Street without a day's gap! This reminded me of how I saw the movies The Bourne Identity and The Bourne Supremacy (which I saw one after the other immediately).

Sunday, June 29, 2014

No Easy Day

An autobiography by a SEAL. But more than that, this book gives first-hand account of Operation Neptune Spear which killed Osama Bin Laden. Most of the book gives details on the author's journey on SEAL (and related) deployments. How training occurs, how adventurous deployments are, how lucky and unlucky folks some folks are during deployments, how much gear they carry, etc. The write-up is not all that great but the story itself is catchy. However, it gets gripping when the tale of the Operation Neptune Spear starts. Complete with 3D pics and minute by minute account of what each team did on that night in Abbottabad, the book culminates with exactly what it started off with: the essence and necessity of training and experience of all the combat assaults. It is a great service to the public that one of the team members in the Operation decided to write this story (however difficult it might have been to keep it as secretive as possible) otherwise the details would never have been known.

Sunday, June 8, 2014

The Pianist by Wladyslaw Szpilman

Another holocaust novel. Well, the events logged itself is as powerful as any story can be. So, one need not bother about how the story is written as long as the bare facts are represented. It is a pure miracle how the author has depicted how he survived the debacle of an entire city (Warsaw) within 5 years. He seemed to have escaped death in every way possible. At times, it goes to such an extent that the read becomes monotonous - the very fact of a person escaping death! However, the movie seemed better.

Rain by Somerset Maugham

A collection of short stories. True to Somerset's style, each story is a great write-up and builds up lot of steam, but in each instance the ending kind of fizzes out. Nevertheless, very entertaining.

Sunday, May 4, 2014

Bringing Down The House

Had seen the movie 21 long time ago. But got this idea that the book might give more understanding on how to beat Blackjack. It certainly did. But it also showed the ugly side of Vegas. The book in fact showed more of Vegas than about Blackjack, but then that is what the guys from MIT experienced which was what depicted in the book. All in all, a fantastic thriller and much more fascinating because it all really happened!!

Monday, April 14, 2014

The Motorcycle Diaries

A memoir by Ernesto Guevara about his motorcycle ride across Latin America with his friend. Did not really like this novel due to many reasons. Although it is a true story, it was difficult to comprehend there were so many helping hands allowing them to freely stay over for the night, give them food, even money. Secondly, the writing didn't seem very catchy either. There was this one line where he mentions 'I miss Alberto Granado' but there is no mention of what really happened to Alberto. Till the previous para, Alberto was right there! Also, they travel so many cities, and without a proper map in the book, it is difficult to imagine where in Latin America they really were....

Sunday, March 16, 2014

Night by Elie Wiesel

Well, The Holocaust itself is a very powerful theme. So any writing on this theme is touching. Elie gives a personal account of the disaster that he endured at Nazi concentration camps, along with his father. There is not much to be said about the writing style or the narration of the book. But the story has enough wheels to keep it constantly moving and making the readers want more.

Sunday, March 2, 2014

Into the Wild by Jon Krakauer

A biography on Chris McCandless. A very poignant and moving story of a young man who lived the 'free' life to the fullest for two years, experienced and enjoyed ultimate freedom until the freedom itself trapped him to his own unfortunate demise. 

A lot of people were 'for' Chris and a lot were 'against' after the story got published, but it is hard - after knowing so much about this boy - to be 'against'. Chris clearly had the earmarks of becoming a great man in his lifetime in whatever he chose to do, even if he had lived for decades. Instead his 'natural' life just spanned for 2 decades and even with such short span of time, he touched so many lives - those whom he met during his hiking and those who just read about him like me.

The novel itself I felt could have been written in a better sequence. Jon has a unique style of writing which I am not very fond of - although I must admit that it is a style of its own. Since his profession is one that of a reporter, he tends to write about the last scene first and then veers the story to how it all unfolded - much like many of the articles that we see in newspapers. I saw the similar style even in Into Thin Air. I would have rather preferred if the novel had started where the story started and ended where the story ended. But the story itself has so much depth in it, that it is a definite must-read in whatever style it is written.

Sunday, January 26, 2014

Into Thin Air by Jon Krakauer

A chilling recollection of Mt Everest expedition that went horribly wrong in May 1996. Explicitly detailed, honestly poignant and almost makes every reader, even the non-climbers, as if they are climbing the Everest. A definite must-read.