The best book I ever read




I had never heard of Rohinton Mistry or A Fine Balance when a friend insisted that I read the book. Its been a long time since I read it, over 2 years, but even now just thinking of the book can give me goose bumps. The book is a graphic description of India under the reign of Indira Gandhi during the emergency, and leaves an indelible mark on your conscience as a constant reminder of the unfair treatment that the masses constantly have to suffer.


The Indian and Global media and attention is focused on the lives of the outlaws of late. I find it surprising that movies like "Slumdog Millionaire" that reprimand private enterprise as the perpetrator of unequal treatment resonate with the sympathies of the world, while shocking movies that shed light on the monstrous forced family planning programme during the tenure of the Indira Gandhi government remain mere documentaries gathering dust in academic institutions.

I was fortunate that our professor of "Business Government and Society" in the first term of the PGP programme at IIM Bangalore exposed us to the reality of emergency. I believe getting ones hands on that movie will be very difficult, but A Fine Balance by Rohinton Mistry is easily available in the market, and is not only a literary masterpiece nominated for the Booker, but also a log of reality that every Indian must be aware of before we let the glamorized nexus of underworld with poverty stricken Indians corrupt our understanding of oppression and inequality.

So click on the image of the book and order it now, and do post your comments here after you are done reading it.

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Posted by Vivek at 3:11 PM | 1 comments | links to this post read on

Dork - Sidin Vadukut



Today I attended a book reading session by Sidin Vadukut at IIM Bangalore's business festival Vista 2010. His book "Dork" details the life of Robin 'einstein' Varghese, a management graduate venturing into the management consulting industry. The book releases today and should be in book stores in a couple of days. It breaks away from the "Life during MBA" mould and focuses on Life after MBA, something Chetan Bhagat also touched upon in his book 2 states. Interestingly, Vadukut revealed that the cover of his book is designed to target the youth, feel young and energetic and look deceptively like it belongs to the Chetan Bhagat genre!
Sidin was candid during the session, cracked several witty jokes and had visibly scored with the audience who couldn't help laughing at even some of the more slapstick jokes. His rendering of his character and situations though definitely made the book sound like it would be fun to read.
Vadukut is an alumnus of NIT Trichy and IIM Ahmedabad, following which he worked with AT Kearney, a leading management consulting firm.

Guess what Diary, I actually ordered the book from flipkart and got a signed copy at a decent discount! And I have spend some part of the last 2 days reading the book as discussions about consulting companies and their recruiting processes get discussed ad nauseam around me.

On a side note, Sidin is very very bitter about the 16 rupees he is making on each of these books. He went on a long tirade lambasting the entire publishing industry for plundering the creatives, and now I see in today's newspaper that he has gone ahead and created a breakup for Livemint to publish on the breakup of the cost structure of a book, how much does the publisher make, how much does the retailer make and that the author is left with precious little. Ironically his own book is priced at Rs. 200 and I have a feeling that these percentages may not hold for books at all price points, and there seems to be no explanation given by vadukut to that effect. I wonder how he rated himself so highly in the analytical framework he used for self analysis :p.



My opinions about this book dork have been swinging to extremes.. I loved the crack on Aravind Adiga in the beginning, read the next 40 pages where Sidin tries hopelessly to amuse, but all he manages is to alienate the character completely. I am no longer involved in the reading, its only a narrative, and I must say diary it is beginning to get interesting now. But I think I will sleep now and give waking up early yet another attempt. I already know I will snooze and sleep but what the hell.


Addendum: (Back cover of Dork)
From the desk of Robin 'Einstein' Varghese

Einsteins Office Theorems
1. Never volunteer for anything. That’s what interns are for.
2. It is better to assume and sit at home, rather than to call up and ask if it is a holiday.
3. The size of the HR department is directly proportional to the number of forms you have to fill when you join.
4. All information can be converted into a PowerPoint presentation. The reverse is impossible.
5. The CEO is always right. Even if it means only the CEO is left.
6. ‘A very rough draft’ means it was written with a BlackBerry on the loo.
7. When the coffee machine goes missing, it is time to sell stock.
8. ‘lndustry standard’ does not refer to your industry.
9. ‘Cost to company’ is a shameless lie. But so is your Linkedln profile.
10. Your IT team lives in a parallel universe where Firefox does not exist.
11. You are the ‘new guy’ till you get the water bottle with your name written on it in black marker.
12. The term ‘work-life balance’ usually refers to two different people.

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Posted by Vivek at 2:04 AM | 2 comments | links to this post read on

Buddha by Osamu Tezuka - Nice show piece

Ever since I first saw the Buddha series by Osamu Tezuka, I wanted it to adorn my book shelf. 6 books into the series, I think its going to do just that. Even though I have enjoyed reading it, I don't think I'm ever going to pick it up again to read it. The drawings by Tezuka are breath taking yet they rarely get enough attention while reading because the lack of dialogue and speech makes page turning rather quick. I do plan to buy the last 2 to complete the set and showcase it in my collection, but its really not worth the money.
Posted by Vivek at 1:59 AM | 0 comments | links to this post read on

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Name: Vivek Kapoor
Location: Delhi, India

I'm just another face in the crowd. I have the same dreams as every other engineer in the country, the same lifestyle, the same aspirations. Yet, we all feel we are so different. Maybe we are, but we do little to prove it. We do little to live by our convictions, to share our thoughts. I'm trying to do a million things at once. Thinking about my future is more a habit than a hobby, and running an e-commerce website my present biggest obsession. Yet, on paper, I'm just another software professional like so many others.. doing a 11-5 (yeah, lovely timings) job. This blog is testimony to the fact that I may not get very far, like millions of others, but still, I'm different, and hopefully, I'll get around to proving myself.