http://epaper.navhindtimes.in/NewsDetail.aspx?storyid=9075&date=2016-06-26&pageid=1
Human brain still remains largely unmapped, but illuminating studies by Sigmund Freud, Jean Paul Sartre, Albert Camus and the art of Leonardo da Vinci, Van Gogh, Egon Schiele, Pablo Picasso, Salvador Dali, Francis Bacon and FN Souza is a revelation into the dark recesses of the ‘Walnut’.
Sunday, June 26, 2016
Sunday, June 19, 2016
Love Loss & What We Ate by Padma Lakshmi
http://epaper.navhindtimes.in/NewsDetail.aspx?storyid=8765&date=2016-06-19&pageid=
Sunday, June 12, 2016
Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn
http://epaper.navhindtimes.in/NewsDetail.aspx?storyid=8536&date=2016-06-12&pageid=1
Sunday, June 5, 2016
Ruskin Bond 2016
Ruskin Bond
Many Small Moments to Savour!
"Book readers are special people, and they will always turn to books as the ultimate pleasure.” -
Ruskin Bond
Come May and the reading fraternity
awaits the release of a new book of short stories by the Indian Bond – Ruskin
Bond. Excerpts from “The charm of elephants and other wild tales” Stories about
his lifelong companions - animals, insects, flowers and trees at Dehra,
Mussourie and Landour.
Harold, Our Hornbill
Here he delineates how birds herald the coming of rains after
the scorching summer heat:
Although Harold the Hornbill never seemed
to drink any water, he loved the rain. We always knew when it was going to rain
because Harold would start chuckling to himself about an hour before the first
raindrops fell.
This used to irritate Aunt Ruby. She was
always being caught in the rain. Harold would be chuckling when she left the
house. And when she returned, drenched to the skin, he would be in fits of
laughter.
As storm clouds would gather, and gusts
of wind would shake the banana trees, Harold would get very excited, and his
chuckle would change to an eerie whistle. “Wheee…..wheee,’ he would scream and
with the first drops of rain, he would start roaring with pleasure. The wind
would carry the rain into the veranda, and Harold would spread his wings and
dance, tumbling about like a circus clown.
The Python
Maybe vanity isn’t just a supercilious human trait after all:
Next we saw the python curled up on the
dressing table, gazing at his reflection in the mirror. I went for Grandfather,
but by the time we returned, the python had moved elsewhere. A little later he
was seen in the garden. Then he was back on the dressing table, admiring
himself in the mirror. Evidently, he had become enamoured of his own
reflection. Grandfather observed that perhaps the attention he was receiving
from everyone had made him a little conceited.
“He’s trying to look better for Aunt
Mabel,” I said, a remark that I instantly regretted, because Grandmother heard
it, and she brought the flat of her hand down on my head. “Well, now we know his weakness,” said
Grandfather. “Are you trying to be funny, too?” demanded Grandmother, looking
her most threatening. “I only meant he was becoming very vain,’ said Grandfather
hastily. “It should be easier to catch him now.”
He set about preparing a large cage with
a mirror on one end. One morning, I saw the python curled up in the cage. He
had eaten all the food, and was relaxing in front of the mirror with something
resembling a smile on his face - if you can imagine a python smiling. I lowered
the trapdoor gently, but the python took no notice; he was in raptures over his
handsome reflection. We left the cage in the jungle, with the trapdoor open.
“He made no attempt to get out,” said Grandfather
later. “And I didn’t have the heart to take the mirror away. It’s the first
time I have seen a snake fall in love.”
The charm of elephants
Everyone
likes elephants. Go where you will, you won’t hear a harsh word against these
outsize animals, who combine power with gentleness, a childish sulkiness with
good humour and great girth with a ballet dancer’s poise:
Elephants are noted for their nimbleness, and in parts of Assam,
there is a belief that wild elephants sometimes assemble together to dance. A
mahout once told me that he had come upon a large forest clearing, the floor
beaten smooth and hard. “It was an
elephant nautch-khana,” he said. A
ballroom! I am quite happy to go along with the quaint belief that elephants
meet by moonlight in their forest ballrooms to dance their reels and
quadrilles. The music of their trunks is no better or worse than the music of
bagpipes.
The world of music
Bond hears symphonic
classical melodies in the natural sounds of the jungle:
At the height of the monsoon, the banyan tree was like an
orchestra pit with the musicians constantly tuning up. Then, from the stream
came the chanting of hundreds of frogs. There were tenors and baritones,
sopranos and contraltos, and occasionally a bass deep enough to have pleased
the great Chaliapin. They sang duets and quartets from La Boheme and other
Italian operas, drowning out other jungle sounds except for the occasional cry
of a jackal doing his best to join in.
“We might as well sing,” said Uncle Ken, and began singing
the ‘Indian love call’ in his best Nelson Eddy manner. I too tried adding my
shrill piping to theirs, with a toy flute in my hands. But they thought poorly
of our musical ability. Whenever I piped, the birds and the insects fell into a
pained and puzzled silence. Uncle Ken
was answered by strident jackal calls, not one but several- with the result
that all self-respecting denizens of the forest fled from the vicinity, and we
saw no wildlife that night.
The friendship of flowers
"A flower doesn't have to rush about in order
to make friends. It remains quietly where it has grown and sweetens the air
with its fragrance. God gave this power to flowers and gentle people."
I like to
take other people’s sick or discarded plants and cajole them back to health.
This has given me a bit of a reputation as a plant doctor. Actually, all I do
is give an ailing plant a quiet corner where it can rest and recuperate from
whatever ails it- they have usually been ill-treated in some way.
I rescued a
dying asparagus fern from the portals of the Savoy Hotel, and now, six months
later, its strong feathery fronds have taken over most of my bedroom window,
and I have no need of curtains. Nandu, the owner of Savoy, now wants his fern
back.
The simple tales continue and we feel
refreshed and reborn every time we read them.
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