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Monthly Archives: September 2017




Michael Dodson
BANARAS: URBAN FORMS AND CULTURAL HISTORIES
2012

Banaras is enigmatic; ‘a city of stark contradictions’ that ‘elicits complicated feelings’ and never allows one the satis-faction of a rounded comprehension of its multilayered myriad mysteries. The city’s con-tradictions challenge one’s purse, prudence, and patience but Banaras still retains…


Reviewed by: Dhrub Kumar Singh

Kaushik Barua
THE NEW OXFORD COMPANION TO ECONOMICS IN INDIA, VOLUMES I AND II
2012

The volume under review can potentially serve as a ready reference for students, teachers, policy makers and researchers, both within the discipline and for those with an interdisciplinary approach. The brief write-ups on the contributions of the doyens of the dis-cipline in India…


Reviewed by: Arindam Banerjee

Douglas E. Haynes
SMALL TOWN CAPITALISM IN WESTERN INDIA: ARTISANS, MERCHANTS AND THE MAKING OF THE INFORMAL ECONOMY, 1870-1960
2012

It is often lamented, both in academic and popular discourse, that colonial rule had a deleterious effect on the indigenous handloom industry edging the hapless weaver, unable to withstand unfair competition with mill-made cloth, out of the market…


Reviewed by: Farhana Ibrahim

Madhu Tandon
THE SPARROW AND THE KING; THE CHOICE; HUNDRED DAYS IN ANTARCTICA; A GEM OF A GIRL
1979

Children’s Book Trust, New Delhi, deserves all praise for its efforts to present a varied fare of folklore, biographies and stories for Indian children.


Reviewed by: Anisha Gadekar

Katherine Boo
BEHIND THE BEAUTIFUL FOREVERS: LIFE, DEATH AND HOPE IN A MUMBAI UNDERCITY
2012

Despite its corny title taken, as Boo and her innumerable reviewers highlight, from an advertising hoarding, Behind the Beautiful Forevers combines fieldwork, ethnography, journalism, and literary flair to devastating effect.1 This effect is perhaps evi-dent in the largely laudatory reviews and more so in the density…


Reviewed by: Subarno Chattarji

Tara Ali Baig
ON GROWING UP
1979

On Growing Up is perhaps the very first book published in India pealing with the processes of puberty. In a warm chatty style, Tara Ali Baig begins by ­giving a thumbnail sketch of the origin of man and then goes on to place man in the context of other creatures of the earth. She then discusses…


Reviewed by: Monisha Mukundan

Atul Kohli
POVERTY AMID PLENTY IN THE NEW INDIA
2012

Atul Kohli’s book offers a comprehensive understanding of poverty in India from a political economy standpoint. It covers the growth story of India at the national and sub-national level in its entirety. Broadly divided into three chapters titled as ‘Political Change’, ‘State and Economy’ and ‘Regional Diversity’ the book’s strength lies in its clarity of thought and expression complemented by the use of simple and lucid language…


Reviewed by: Siddhartha Mukerji

Tara Ali Baig
INDRANI
1979

What is sadly lacking in most Indian story books for children is a light touch with language, originality, and a lively sense of the ridiculous. Most children abundantly possess the last two qualities, but I doubt if they find much in this genre to satisfy them.


Reviewed by: Amena Jayal

R. Srivatsan
HISTORY OF DEVELOPMENT THOUGHT: A CRITICAL ANTHOLOGY
2012

This anthology of writings, covering a period of fifty years of development thinking from 1954 to 2004, examines some of the debates in development theory that emerged after the Second World War. It is the outcome of research conducted as part of the development initiative of Anveshi research…


Reviewed by: Shravani Prakash

Shivam
SIXTEEN FOREVER; THE LADY OF THE LOTUS
1979

Children’s books in India have always been relegated to the last place in anyone’s priorities whether it be the publisher’s or the parent’s! CBT’s pione­ering effort in providing some sort of reading material for children aside from the dull text-books that children are burdened with deserves to be highly com­mended.


Reviewed by: Vijaya Ghosh

T.C.A. Srinivasa-Raghavan
ON THE TURNPIKE: INDIAN ECONOMY SINCE 1947 AND INDIAN ECONOMIC SERVICE AT 50
2012

In these days of transparency and disclosure, I should state upfront that T.C.A. Srinivasa-Raghavan is a friend I have known for many years. In Business Standard days, he was also a colleague. He has been a journalist and columnist across a variety of business papers and is widely read…


Reviewed by: Bibek Debroy

Lata Singh
POPULAR TRANSLATIONS OF NATIONALISM, BIHAR 1920-1922
2012

The noncooperation movement was the first mass-based political mobilization on a nationwide scale which involved people from various segments of Indian society. In a sense, it transformed the psyche of the people, trained them in political agitation and made them conscious of their rights…


Reviewed by: Jawaid Alam

Nikita Sud
LIBERALIZATION, HINDU NATIONALISM AND THE STATE: A BIOGRAPHY OF GUJARAT
2012

The nature of the relationship between economic liberalization, of expansion of economic opportunities and liberal poli-tical culture is the subject of this study. Nikita Sud has chosen to study this large question through a political, economic and social bio-graphy of modern Gujarat…


Reviewed by: Tridip Suhrud

William Gould
RELIGION AND CONFLICT IN MODERN SOUTH ASIA
2012

The running threat behind two centuries of violent community conflicts in South Asia is not religion, nor poverty or lack of education. The running threat is the peculiar nature of the South Asian State and the forms of political representation it has engendered…


Reviewed by: Ward Berenschot

Bulbul Sharma
Now That I'm Fifty
2012

Now that I am Fifty by Bulbul Sharma is a collection of short stories about women who have entered the fifties and their experiences at reaching that milestone.


Reviewed by: Indu Liberhan

Sweta Srivastava Vikram
NOT ALL BIRDS SING
2012

The book is a collaboration between two different genres and cultures—Sweta Srivastava Vikram (USA) and Claire Anna Watson (Australia) met as part of an Artists exchange programme and this is the result of their interaction—a combined expression of poetry—both written and visual.


Reviewed by: Arthi Anand Navaneeth

Ishtiyaque Danish
THE ARAB SPRING
2012

Ibrahim, a youngster from a rich Saudi family in Riyadh goes out to the restaurant with his mother and sisters, and comes out shell-shocked. He has seen his father take a young woman to a ‘family cabin’. The immediate inference (and it turns out to be the right one) is that his father has married again…


Reviewed by: Dipavali Sen

Abdus Samad
THE JOURNEY OF A BURNING BOAT
2012

The Journey of a Burning Boat is a work of fiction which sweeps its reader deep into the unrelentingly brutal, inhuman, world of the flesh trade. A subterranean world whose existence everyone is aware of and which manifests itself often in newspaper headlines, only to be forgotten or pushed to the peripheries…


Reviewed by: Ranjana Kaul

Richard Adams
CURIOUS LIVES: ADVENTURE FABLES FROM AN ENCHANTING WORLD
2012

Curious Lives is a collection of five ‘moralistic adventures’, previously and separately published, set in the world of virtuous ferrets. The cover of the book has a pair of bright yellow eyes gleaming from behind dense foliage. It is just the eyes that can be made out and it is just as well. The internet informs…


Reviewed by: R. Natraj

Jugal Mody
TOKE
2012

Toke means puffing a pipe or pot filled with marijuana. And true to its title, you get high with the novel’s surreal plot. The story is set in motion as you are introduced to Nikhil the protagonist who is fighting to come out of ganja-induced hallucinatory dreams. He is a regular guy with a regular job and suffers from regular bouts of insecurity…


Reviewed by: Abdullah Khan
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ISSN No. 0970-4175 (Print)