Few people know that Swami Vivekananda was fluent in Sanskrit. He had a disciple named Sharatchandra Chakravarty who kept a diary, written in Bengali but it has since been translated into English. This anecdote is from this diary. Shri Ramakrishna had a householder disciple named Nag Mahashaya. On one occasion in 1897, when Sharatchandra Chakravarty was present, another disciple, who frequently visited Nag Mahashaya, came to meet Swami Vivekananda and mentioned Nag Mahashaya. Swami Vivekananda addressed this disciple in Sanskrit with a reference to Nag Mahashaya's great spiritual success. Translated, the quote reads: "We have been destroyed in our pursuit of the truth. O bee! You are the one who has indeed been successful."What is remarkable is not that Swami Vivekananda spoke in Sanskrit, but that he used a quote from literature, Kalidasa's Abhijnanashakuntalam in this case. The Shakuntala story is about King Dushyanta and Shakuntala, and King Dushyanta said this when a bee was hoveri
Defining and understanding these 12 technological forces and how they will shape our future in the next 30 years is the thrust of The Inevitable
The true history of the games is a far cry from the platitude-laden, sepia-toned nostalgia pumped out by the International Olympic Committee and sponsors
Authors Arun Gadre and Abhay Shukla have based this book on a set of 78 interviews with leading doctors across the country conducted at Support for Advocacy and Training to Health Initiatives
Ms Anja Manuel has tackled political systems and dissent in both countries as interrelated themes
S Muthiah and Ranjitha Ashok's book collects plenty of such anecdotes from erstwhile employees of British firms in India, and presents them in an immensely readable format
Antonio Garcia Martinez's Chaos Monkeys, a book whose bland all-purpose title belies the fact that this is a valley account like no other
The book contains evocative details of Rao's failures in preventing two of the ugliest incidents of social disharmony in independent India - the 1992 Babri Masjid demolition and the 1984 Sikh riots
Amitav Ghosh creates a fabric out of threads drawn from all the themes that must be part of a complete conversation on climate change
The transition from British rule to independence is conventionally described as peaceful. This is true only insofar as there was no armed conflict with the erstwhile imperial power, for multitudes died in the Partition bloodbath and there was open war within two months of the "Brexit".The subcontinent has never enjoyed an extended period of peace since. India has fought three-and-a-half wars with Pakistan, one war with China (plus a big artillery duel), indulged in an insane foray into Sri Lanka, carried out a more justifiable counter-coup in the Maldives and also been enmeshed in innumerable long-running internal conflicts with separatists, insurgents, Maoists, and what have you. The republic also undertook several "police actions" between 1948 and 1961, to integrate princely states like Hyderabad and Junagadh, and to force the Portuguese out of Goa, Daman and Diu.This book covers conventional conflicts and police actions during the first quarter-century of independent India's existen
For George W Bush, the summer already looks unbearable. The party he gave his life to will repudiate him by nominating a bombastic serial insulter, who makes the famously brash former president look like a museum docent by comparison. And a renowned presidential biographer is weighing in with a judgment that makes Mr Bush's gentleman's Cs at Yale look like the honour roll.If Mr Bush eventually gets a more sympathetic hearing by history, as he hopes, it will not start with Jean Edward Smith's Bush, a comprehensive and compelling narrative punctuated by searing verdicts of all the places where the author thinks the 43rd president went off track.Mr Smith, a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize, made a name for himself in part with masterly biographies of Dwight D Eisenhower and Ulysses S Grant, offering historical reassessments of underrated presidents who looked better with the passage of time. With Bush, he sticks to the original conventional assessment, presenting a shoot-from-the-hip Texan
On the evening of April 15, 2014, Gas Wars: Crony Capitalism and the Ambanis, a book written by Paranjoy Guha-Thakurta, Subir Ghosh and Jyotirmoy Chaudhuri was officially released at the India Habitat Centre in New Delhi. The next day lawyers for Mukesh Ambani's Reliance Industries (RIL) sent the authors a legal notice alleging defamation, calling for a cease on the sale, publication and distribution of the book. The notice suggested that all copies be destroyed, publicity for the book be stopped and the authors tender an unconditional apology. The same notice was sent to the publisher, distributor, printer, internet retailers Amazon, Flipkart and Kobo and even to the lady who sent the invitations for the launch function.A week later, on April 22, came a second legal notice from ADAG, the Anil Dhirubhai Ambani Group. On April 23, came a third notice to all the nine respondents. This one took umbrage at comments made at the launch function and asked for damages of Rs 100 crore within 10
Rage of the river is a light and breezy read. Within the first few pages it feels like an immersive travelogue, except that there are no happy scenes in the Mandakini valley
A lot of effort goes into sustaining what Mervyn King calls the "alchemy" of modern monetary and banking systems in his latest book
"The very rich are different from you and me," Ernest Hemingway has F Scott Fitzgerald write in the original version of The Snows of Kilimanjaro. "Yes," comes the response, "they have more money."This famous (and wholly fictional) exchange is memorable because it captures so succinctly one of the great fascinations of finance, how it is at the same time something so completely mysterious and so utterly banal. It also poses an important question: Does having more money than someone constitute a difference only in quantity, or in quality? Does the increase of financial wealth just make for more of the same - or does it change people in a more essential way?The goal of William N Goetzmann, professor of finance and management at Yale, in his book is to explore the consequences of the invention and growth of finance. As his title suggests, his conclusion is that they are firmly positive.The idea that dominates this book is that finance is a "technology of civilization" - a way of thinking
Navayana's latest anthology of B R Ambedkar's work, Riddles in Hinduism, is yet another reminder in these fraught times of the necessity to critically examine the basis of Hinduism
Jairam Ramesh's new book Old History New Geography is a fascinating chronicle of the why and the how of the bifurcation of Andhra Pradesh into two states
Rajiv Kumar is a familiar face as economist and columnist, with impressive academic credentials. He is currently with Centre for Policy Research. He is also a personal friend.In terms of the structure, Mr Kumar has produced a most unusual book. The table of contents mentions the chapters but does not number them. Spread over 317 pages, there are five chapters. We can ignore the first chapter, because that is a brief introduction on the May 2014 electoral outcome. After Chapters 2, 3 and 4, we have an appendix, roughly in the middle of the book, that comprises a listing of what various ministries have done since May 2014. I didn't quite understand why it is located there, perhaps to indicate a clean break between Chapters 2, 3 and 4 and what comes thereafter. You almost get the feel of reading two different books.The second half of the book has Chapter 5 and an epilogue, followed by another appendix. This second appendix is a compilation of Mr Kumar's newspaper articles on the 2016-17
These new books will help younger readers understand just what a long strange trip Muhammad Ali's life has been
The book, an account of Clint Hill days as a Secret Service agent under Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon and Ford, is also free of self-congratulation or prurient gossip