The joys of co-hosting

Technically, it was Karthik who got tagged. But I’ve no powers of resistance against tags such as this. Am butting in. But Karthik - Veena I are both eager to know your own list.

Total number of books I own

About 300-400 (counting stuff from the dark ages, including my collection of Russian children’s literature). Practically of it is back home in India. I have less than 10 (although I suspect 25 may be a fairer number) in Dallas. My parents are under strict instructions to NOT lend my books out, and I conduct random, unannounced phone interviews to ensure that they’re sticking to the rules. Thankfully none of my cousins is into most of the stuff I read, but my old Asterix comics are under constant threat and that’s enough to keep me awake at nights.

Last book(s) I bought

Ponniyin Selvan Collection by Kalki as translated by CV Karthik Narayanan

Parthiban Kanavu by Kalki (another English translation)

Two Lives by Vikram Seth

Valuation: Measuring and Managing the Value of Companies by McKinsey & Company Inc., Tim Koller, Marc Goedhart, David Wessels - purchased in a moment of madness I still can’t explain

Last books(s) I read

Howard’s End by EM Forster

The Greatest Man in Cedar Hole by Stephanie Doyon

On Beauty by Zadie Smith

Caesar: A Novel by Colleen McCullough

Books I am currently reading

Two Lives by Vikram Seth

Cryptonomicon by Neal Stephenson

White Teeth - Zadie Smith

Shipping News - Annie Proulx

Five books that I have really enjoyed or influenced me

An Equal Music by Vikram Seth

On Beauty by Zadie Smith

The Head of Kays (my first Wodehouse)

Pride & Prejudice

The Tenant of Wildfell Hall by Anne Bronte

The last two are major ‘influencers’, and have contributed in a major way to my approach to life and romance - the conviction that I don’t want to settle for anything short of the sort of romance that Elizabeth & Darcy have, balanced by the equally unassailable conviction that true love can only lead to a marriage like Helen Graham’s. My friends & family wonder why I’m screwed up - well, now you know. I place the blame squarely on these two long dead Englishwomen.

Books I plan to buy / read next

Haruki Murakami -Kafka on the Shore

The White Mughals by William Dalrymple

Anything by Kazuo Ishiguro / Zadie Smith / Vikram Seth / Margaret Atwood

The next Harry Potter

Authors / Books that caught my attention and I have never read, but consider my “duty” to read

The Histories - Herodotus

Homer’s Iliad & OdysseyNiall Ferguson

Books I own but never get around to reading

Gabriel Garcia Marquez - One Hundred Years of Solitude

Salman Rushdie - Midnight’s Children

Michael Cunnigham’s The HoursValuation: Measuring and Managing the Value of Companies by McKinsey & Company Inc., Tim Koller, Marc Goedhart, David Wessels. I knew this would happen. It’s lovely to be so right about things.

Comments (15 comments)

why you bring your Asterix collection here? Why risk it? My own collection is still in Madras because I cannot decide whether it is my brother’s or mine technically! This is true of most of my other books as well- the William series by Richmal Crompton.\, Oscar Wilde….

tilo / March 3rd, 2006, 2:39 am / #

“Salman Rushdie - Midnight’s Children”..

My sincere advice.. Bury it, burn it but never read it..
The writing style is good, but the rest is crap..
Read it against my wiser senses and regretted it wholeheartedly.

the_soliloquist / March 3rd, 2006, 4:58 am / #

Im doing cryptonomicon too. Waiting to get his baroque cycle next. he’s a genius sf writer and also fiction.

gp / March 3rd, 2006, 10:02 am / #

Tilo: My Asterix collection is indeed in Madras…I’m simply waiting for my cousins to grow up and lose interest so that I will no longer have to worry about them. Yes, I realize that I am all grown up and still love them, but one can always hope…

Soliloquist: Falstaff’s advised me to do the exact opposite.. Guess now I’m intrigued enough to at least give it a try. But I shan’t let myself feel obliged to finish it…I don’t like Rushdie (tried Moor’s Last Sigh & gave up after the first few pages) but was told that Midnight’s Children might be worth risking.

GP: Karthik’s influenced me into reading Stephenson. I started with the middle one in the Baroque series, but gave up because I couldn’t understand anything. Cryptonomicon’s coming along nicely so far.

DoZ / March 3rd, 2006, 11:40 am / #

Ponniyin Selvan Collection by Kalki as translated by CV Karthik Narayanan

Doz -English translation not acceptable if you know your Tamil alphabets :-).

Cousins - luckily none of my mine would be seen reading a book but even on that outside chance my parents don’t dare to lend out my books.

tilo / March 7th, 2006, 10:53 am / #

Tilo: You have guessed my shameful secret. I know the Tamil alphabet, but that’s about all I know… Had ambitions to someday learn enough Tamil to read the stuff in the original, but have finally decided to get practical & buy the translations…

Talking of cousins - I have a couple who do read. I try to encourage them, and at the same time convince them that ALL of the stuff I read (ergo own) is boring and nothing that would interest them. My parents (rightly) feel that my books are R rated, and hence out of bounds… I dread the day one of my cousins discovers an interest in literary fiction. That day, I shall disown them (cousins - not books, but of course!)

DoZ / March 7th, 2006, 11:10 am / #

Believe me, knowing the alphabet is quite enough to read these books. I could do it. My mother really started “repecting” me only when I got through these volumes.

She was so inspired - she bought her own set and reread the books. I have no idea why I am telling you all this- anyway Happy Reading :-)

tilo / March 7th, 2006, 7:36 pm / #

That’s really encouraging, and am glad you shared it with me. My dad would simply shake his head in regret if he knew that I’ve bought the translations… I’d like to read the stuff in Tamil, but if I can’t make out “Kuzhithalai” or something like that on a bus before the bus leaves the stop, I think Kamba Ramayanam (which my dad would like me to read in the original) is a long way off… But I agree, Kalki in English is a start. I shall try very hard to not wonder what it must’ve lost in translation, and equally hard to not calculate the number of chapters I can read in english in the time it takes me to read a para in Tamil. I bought the books in part to guilt-trip / inspire myself into reading the original versions.

DoZ / March 7th, 2006, 8:05 pm / #

well then add atleast a slim, readable Tamil short stories book to the list.

That will improve your chances of reading Kambaramayan eventually………

tilo / March 7th, 2006, 10:09 pm / #

Or the online Jayakanthan collection here. Very easy reading. Navin over at Blogocentricity tried it and loved it… I think Sujatha/Jayakanthan are the easiest to get started with.

That said, it really is ok if you don’t read in Tamil. I mean, it makes you feel good and all that, but personally, if I weren’t all that comfortable in a language I don’t know how much pleasure I would get from reading.

Karthik / March 7th, 2006, 11:05 pm / #

I have a little Spanish but I will have no fun reading Marquez in the original - in fact it will be sheer torture. That is where as Karthik says I would be not “all that comfortable in a language” and wouldn’t bother.

In any case, PS has a great plot - there is nothing of literary value there - you’ll lose nothing in reading it in translation but if you read the original you’ll just gain the confidence to approach real literature in Tamil. That’s all. A simple matter of grappling with those alphabets so they fall in line for u , once and for all time.

Since I am on this I know what is good for you mode can I say please go to the Big Temple in Tanjore if you haven’t already been :-).

Ciao

tilo / March 8th, 2006, 8:45 am / #

Karthik: Thank you for getting me started. I appreciate the link & will certainly try Jayakanthan. I am curious about the experience of reading in Tamil… I suspect for me it will be something like crossing 7 oceans etc. to simply get home.

Tilo: I am afraid I don’t have much fun reading Marquez in English, let alone Spanish :) I see your point about battling with alien languages though.

Thank you for the tip on PS. I was hoping as much.

About the temple in Tanjore, I have been there, when I was a kid. For some reason the only thing I remember about the place is the Shiva Lingam with the thousands (?) of tinier Lingams in it… (If that’s even the right temple…)Most folks seem to remember the big Nandi.

DoZ / March 8th, 2006, 11:22 am / #

The only thing I remember about the big Temple is the elephant at the entrance :-).

The sculpture is amazing, the Dwarapalaka had a nice ass!

tilo / March 9th, 2006, 7:03 pm / #

Tilo, Tilo, Tilo. I’ll forget you said that ;)

We went there with an (American) friend a few years back, and the elephant blew right into his nose. He told us later that the beast had bad breath.

The temple is reasonably well kept though. We later went to the library (Sarfoji?) and it was such a wreck. Very sad.

Karthik / March 10th, 2006, 10:44 am / #

http://tilotamma.blogspot.com/2005/08/sarasvati-mahal.html

Yes but the library could be great if someone knowledgable gives a tour.Check out this 4-part Hindu article when you have the time.

tilo / March 10th, 2006, 2:51 pm / #

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