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Bookless in Baghdad
Bookless in Baghdad: Reflections on Writing and Writers | Shashi Tharoor
3 posts | 2 read | 9 to read
Shashi Tharoor is once again at his provocative best. In the title essay, we learn the steep price paid by some Iraqis just to obtain a book; what does it mean when selling books, essentially selling culture, out of ones own library is the only way to put bread on the table? Later, Tharoor reminisces about growing up with books in India and the central position of classics like the Mahabharata in developing his own literary identity. The poignant homage to Chilean poet Pablo Neruda recalls his incendiary deathbed challenge as an oppressive military regime invaded his home: There is only one thing of danger for you heremy poetry! The defining features of todays world, Tharoor writes of the global stage, are the relentless forces of globalizationthe same forces used by the terrorists in their macabre dance of death and destruction. His astute views on Salman Rushdie, Indias love for P. G. Wodehouse, Rudyard Kipling, Aleksandr Pushkin, John le Carr, V. S. Naipaul, and Winston Churchill make for fascinating reading. His insightful takes on Hollywood and Bollywood will intrigue even the most demanding cinephile. Together, these thirty-nine pieces reveal the inner workings of one of todays most eclectic writers.
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SusanInTiburon
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I'm here at the oral surgeon's office to drive my guy home after he has a tooth pulled ... and I FORGOT to bring a book! HOW⁉️ I took the elevator down 24 floors and walked for six blocks, but apparently I'm in the middle of an urban book desert. It's just me and a bunch of old magazines -- and not one literary review in the bunch! ☹️ Thank goodness there's Litsy!

aeeklund NOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!! 8y
mcctrish You need the serial app for emergencies 8y
See All 13 Comments
LiteraryinPA It's the stuff of nightmares!! 8y
BestOfFates Now that's an emergency! 8y
MemoirsForMe 😱😱😱 8y
SusanInTiburon @mcctrish You're right! I'll download it immediately! 8y
Literaryunicorn 😳😱 We need a bookmobile that responds to those kinds of emergencies. 8y
Tanner 😳😳😳 8y
SusanInTiburon @Literaryunicorn That's brilliant! 8y
Chelsey Not even a New Yorker? 8y
SusanInTiburon @Chelsey 😂 I wish! 8y
mcctrish 👍🏻 8y
62 likes13 comments
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ramyasbookshelf
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Tharoor's essay on reading PG Wodehouse while growing up makes me want to revisit the classics and pick one up right away. So nostalgic!

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quote
ramyasbookshelf
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"As with other children of migratory Indians, English became the language not only of my schoolbooks but of my private life: I played with my friends in English, quarreled with my sisters in English, wrote to my relatives in English - and read for pleasure in English"

11 likes4 stack adds