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.