Krishna Sobti

Not by pen, nor by author, nor indeed by technique, but life by its own motion went on spreading, page after page, on paper, as if there had sprung up a mighty living tree on earth’, says Krishna Sobti about her novel, Zindagi Nama Ek ­Zinda Rookh. It is nothing short of a tour de force, a fascinating kaleidoscope of the life and times of pre-partition Punjab…


Reviewed by: R.P. Naik
Narendra Mohan

The book, the dust jacket claims, is the first ever collection of long Hindi poems written in our time. The poets whose works are included are Agyeya, Muktibodh, Dharmvira Bharati, Raghuvir Sahai, Raj Kamal Chaudhary, Dhoomil, Amrita Bharati, Baldeo Vanshi, Mani Madhukar and Leeladhar Jagoodi…


Reviewed by: Mrinal Pande
Daniel Patrick Moynihan

Moynihan is full of bounce and breeze in this 300-page account of his steward­ship of American interests in the United Nations for eight months, July ‘75 to February ’76. It pullulates with contro­versies, but for an author whose back­ground is trumpetted to be one of research and analysis, these are surpris­ingly built on many wrong premises and unsatisfactory data…


Reviewed by: Samar Sen
Jaiboy Joseph

To use a cliche, something Pothan Joseph abhorred, he was an institution by himself. Among the ‘greats’ of Indian journalism, during a period when giants abounded in the Indian press un­like at present, Joseph was as much admi­red and loved for his personal qualities as he was respected for his writing skill…


Reviewed by: C.N. Chitta Ranjan
K.P. Misra

Professor Misra’s book, Quest for an International Order in the Indian Ocean is a well structured analysis of the poli­tico-strategic significance of the Indian Ocean, the interests of the big powers and the response of the littorals…


Reviewed by: Rear Admiral M.K. Roy
Peter Willetts

During the last three decades, about a dozen books have been produced by western scholars on the theory and practice of nonalignment. Of these mostly American and British scholars the latter have shown relatively greater sensitivity and understanding of the philosophical foundation and practical implications…


Reviewed by: K.P. Misra
Y. Venugopal Reddy

Even the well-educated layman let alone an ordinary citizen in India does not know the planning process in all its complexities. The concept of multi­level planning is understood even less. A book that describes the process, the way it has evolved over the years, its future directions, the meaning…


Reviewed by: P.H. Vaishnav
M.S.A. Rao

The volume under review is a bunch of studies in the sociology of social move­ments in India. Never in the history of Indian social sciences has the case for a sociology of social movements received so much attention as it has in the 1970’s. Only a decade and a half ago the conven­tionalist ‘establishment’ of the Indian…


Reviewed by: D.N. Dhanagare