Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner

Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner is a disturbing, powerful, intense, gripping and provocative novel. It stirs a number of emotions. Once you start reading it, you cannot put it down. The degeneration of Afghanistan, the displacement and migration of people bring back memories of the partition of India. The pain/the struggle, strike a chord even in people who were not directly affected by the partition. We have all grown up listening to stories of how our grandparents fled, escaped, leaving everything behind, hoping to return to their motherland one day. But that day never came. How people adapt to new places, people, situations, occupations is a remarkable thing about mankind. We know this by example. In Hosseini’s novel too, we find Afghan families adapting to the changed situation, earning bread and butter in anyway possible.

Besides this we get involved with the characters and their destinies. At a very early stage in the novel we realize there is more to Hasan’s and Amir‘s father’s relationship. We are angry at Amir’s cowardice and subsequent ill-treatment of his loyal, childhood mate Hasan. It proves how jealousy corrodes the goodness within. That one mistake changes/affects the lives of so many people. We feel sorry for Hasan who has to live life like a hazara and endure all kinds of unimaginable insults. The story would have been different, had young Amir protested and saved Hasan from abuse. Hosseini’s portrayal of childhood with its vulnerabilities, fears, jealousies, tensions, is terrific.

All this in the backdrop of the turbulent Afghanistan – the end of monarchy, invasion by the Russian forces and the rise of the Taliban regime. But it is the personal story of the two childhood friends – Amir and Hasan that binds the story together. And the message ‘there is a way to be good again’ is something we all need to imbibe.

Chetan Bhagat’s the 3 mistakes of my life

Chetan Bhagat’s the 3 mistakes of my life

Like his other novels, Bhagat’s 3 Mistakes is also based on real events. Bhagat caters to the Indian taste by packing in a lot of masala – cricket, business, politics, religion, love and calamities like the earthquake and the Godhara riots. But as in his other novels, intensity is missing in this one too. After reading the novel we keep it back on the shelf – the characters or situations do not stay with us for long.

The novel is about three young friends in Ahmedabad (Gujarat), Govind, Ish and Omi. Govind is the entrepreneur in the group and motivates the others to set up a cricket shop. The shop gradually gains popularity and Govind dreams of expanding business. He wants to move to a new city location. They save, borrow and invest money in a new shopping mall under construction. But their dreams come crashing down with the earthquake. They are shaken up especially Govind but somehow carry on with their lives. Govind teaches maths to Ish’s sister Vidya, Ish finds solace in coaching a muslim boy, Ali, who has exceptional abilities in batting and Omi dabbles with religion and politics in the shadow of his maternal uncle Bittoo mama. Life goes on till Gujarat is hit by the Godhara riots. Omi dies while trying to save Ali, the trust between Ish and Govind is broken when Ish finds about Govind’s affair with his sister Vidya.

From here on life becomes a burden for Govind. And when he is no longer able to bear his friend’s silence and rejection, he pops sleeping pills. It is here that Chetan Bhagat , the writer appears on the scene to set things right. Read the novel to find more.

Chetan Bhagat’s One Night @ the Call Center

Chetan Bhagat’s – One Night @ the Call Center

Bhagat’s One Night…is interesting, contemporary, easy to understand and extremely racy.  It does not tax your brains with heavy stuff. The story is both real and far-fetched. The call center part appears real but God’s intervention………… Well! I think we all need that to ‘right size’ our chaotic, messed up lives. God, are you listening?

The story is about six people working for a call center ‘Connexions’ in Gurgaon, near Delhi.Shyam, Varun, Priyanka, Radhika and Esha are all young and confused. Only the Military Uncle is fifty plus. They cater to foolish/childish queries of their American customers, most of them unwillingly, as it gives them bread and butter, cokes, pizzas and discos etc. The America bashing dialogues bring in the humour though.

The story revolves around the sufferings, family problems, ambitions, hopes and love life of the six characters. But after God’s call, they listen to their ‘inner call’ and act accordingly and fast. (The sudden personality changes look unreal). But perhaps that’s how God works.

So if you want a look into the lives of the current generation of young people, their work, aspirations, attitudes, needs and values – read the novel.