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Finished reading "Secrets of True Happiness" by Tai Sheridan.

This is a little book with big ideas.

Although written by a Zen Buddhist, the author says the book is for everyone regardless of creed or faith. I can attest he is truthful.

Dr Sheridan has written another little gem titled "Buddha in Blue Jeans."

Both are currently offered by Amazon FREE to Kindle readers. The best things in life are free, eh.

FM
Originally Posted by IGH:

Bookman, thought about you when I read this quote a few minutes ago...

No possession can surpass, or even equal, a good library, to the lovers of books. Here are treasured up for his daily use and delectation, riches which increase by being consumed, and pleasures that never cloy. ~ John Alfred Landford.

Nice to know you thought of me "between the covers", IGH.

Delectation, indeed.

And "pleasures that never cloy."

FM
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:
Originally Posted by IGH:

Bookman, thought about you when I read this quote a few minutes ago...

No possession can surpass, or even equal, a good library, to the lovers of books. Here are treasured up for his daily use and delectation, riches which increase by being consumed, and pleasures that never cloy. ~ John Alfred Landford.

Nice to know you thought of me "between the covers", IGH.

Delectation, indeed.

And "pleasures that never cloy."

FM
Originally Posted by IGH:
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:
Originally Posted by IGH:

Bookman, thought about you when I read this quote a few minutes ago...

No possession can surpass, or even equal, a good library, to the lovers of books. Here are treasured up for his daily use and delectation, riches which increase by being consumed, and pleasures that never cloy. ~ John Alfred Landford.

Nice to know you thought of me "between the covers", IGH.

Delectation, indeed.

And "pleasures that never cloy."

FM
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:
Originally Posted by IGH:
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:
Originally Posted by IGH:

Bookman, thought about you when I read this quote a few minutes ago...

No possession can surpass, or even equal, a good library, to the lovers of books. Here are treasured up for his daily use and delectation, riches which increase by being consumed, and pleasures that never cloy. ~ John Alfred Landford.

Nice to know you thought of me "between the covers", IGH.

Delectation, indeed.

And "pleasures that never cloy."

 

National Library - Guyana

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FM
Last edited by Former Member

Finished reading "Gandhi's Printing Press: Experiments in Slow Reading" by Isabel Hofmeyr.

This scholarly book discusses Mahatma Gandhi's experiments with reading, writing and printing while he lived in South Africa between 1893 and 1914.

It focuses on a multi-lingual newspaper Gandhi started, INDIAN OPINION, as well as pamphlets and periodicals he wrote and produced in South Africa. One of them, HIND SWARAJ or INDIAN SELF RULE, gets particular attention.

Central to all these undertakings is a small partly manual, partly mechanical printing press operating under a grand name, International Printing Press.

Together, the press and publications allowed Gandhi's political work and ideas to spread widely outside South Africa so that before he returned to India his prestige had preceded him.

FM

Gabriel García MÃĄrquez, Nobel laureate writer, dies aged 87

UK GUARDIAN, APRIL 17 ---

The Colombian Nobel laureate Gabriel García MÃĄrquez, who unleashed the worldwide boom in Spanish literature with his novel One Hundred Years of Solitude, has died at the age of 87. He had been admitted to hospital in Mexico City on 3 April with pneumonia.

Matching commercial success with critical acclaim, García MÃĄrquez became a standard-bearer for Latin American letters, establishing a route for negotiations between guerillas and the Colombian government, building a friendship with Fidel Castro, and maintaining a feud with fellow literature laureate Mario Vargas Llosa that lasted more than 30 years.

Colombian president Juan Manuel Santos said via Twitter: "A thousand years of solitude and sadness at the death of the greatest Colombian of all time.

"Solidarity and condolences to his wife and family ... Such giants never die."

Gabriel García MÃĄrquez, Nobel laureate writer, dies aged 87

Journalists gathered outside García MÃĄrquez's house in Mexico City in the hope that one of the family members who was reportedly at his side would emerge.

Mexican president Enrique PeÃąa Nieto expressed sadness at the death of "one of the greatest writers of our time," in the name of Mexico, the novelist's adopted home.

Chilean writer Luis SepÚlveda was quoted by the Mexican newspaper Reforma as saying that he was "the most important writer in Spanish of the 20th century", central to the Latin American literary boom that "revolutionised everything: the imagination, the way of telling a story, and the literary universe".

The Colombian singer Shakira wrote: "We will remember your life, dear Gabo, like a unique and unrepeatable gift, and the most original of stories."

US president Barack Obama said the world had lost "one of its greatest visionary writers", adding that he cherished an inscribed copy of One Hundred Years of Solitude, presented to him by the author on a visit to Mexico. "I offer my thoughts to his family and friends, whom I hope take solace in the fact that Gabo's work will live on for generations to come," he said.

====================

GILBAKKA'S COMMENT: I've read five of Marquez's books, all of which impressed me much. Also, I read two books about Marquez. He was a titan among Latin American writers. I salute his memory.

FM
Originally Posted by IGH:

Heard about Gabriel García MÃĄrquez death on the news yesterday.

I read half-way through One Hundred Years of Solitude about 5 yrs ago ... got a bit confusing so I did not continue it.

Have " Love in the Time of Cholera" but have not gotten around to reading it.

Bookman - is when the the generations after generation using the same names; that's when I got confused.  I still have my book-mark in the book.

T_P

FM

Finished reading "My Experiments with Truth: An Autobiography" by M.K. Gandhi.

The book covers the first 52 years of the Mahatma's 78-year life.

The "Truth" he discusses is not only metaphysical/philosophical but also real facts of his life. Ever the humble narrator aware of his imperfections, he regards his various activities as experiments. And he is candid in describing all his experiments in diet, home remedies, rural hygiene and sanitation, printing and publishing newspapers, spinning and weaving homespun cloth, civil resistance, etc.

One thing that struck me while reading this book was the significant role Mahatma Gandhi played in forcing the colonial government of India to abolish in 1917 the emigration of Indian indentured laborers to various parts of the world including British Guiana and the Caribbean.

I confess I should have read this book many years ago as it could have helped me in my political activities in Guyana. Better late than never.

FM

Finished reading "NOW I KNOW WHO MY COMRADES ARE: Voices from the Internet Underground" by Emily Parker.

This book focuses on Internet activists and bloggers in China, Cuba and Russia who are exposing human rights violations and corruption while combating isolation, fear and apathy in those three countries respectively.

FM

Finished reading "Rosa" by Jonathan Rabb.

"November 1918. A socialist revolution is sweeping across Germany, wreaking havoc on war-torn Berlin. Amid the ruin of the city's slums, four women are found dead—all with identical scars on their backs. Detective Inspector Nikolai Hoffner and his assistant, Hans Fichte, are baffled by the killings, and when another body is discovered, the case takes an ominous and unexpected turn. The fifth victim is none other than Rosa Luxemburg—a leader of the suppressed socialist uprising. Now, the Polpo, political police, are interested in the murders, and the mystery of Rosa's death leads Hoffner into the heart of Weimar's political turmoil, where ideas can be fatal. A spellbinding historical thriller...." [Amazon review]

FM

Finished reading "New Homelands" by Paul Younger.

This is a study of Hindu communities in Mauritius, Guyana, Trinidad, South Africa, East Africa and Fiji. These were former British colonies which had together imported about 1.1 million indentured laborers from India, the majority being Hindus.

The Guyana section of the book is interesting. It shows how the South Indian/Madrasi Tamil-and-Telugu-speaking Hindus developed their temples and worshipping methods differently from the mainly Bhojpuri-Hindi-speaking North Indians.

I learned something important about the Guyana Pandits' Council and my attitude to it has changed. I now understand the crucial role the Pandits'Council played in securing the overall interests of Guyanese Hindus before independence and why it afterwards chose cooperation and not confrontation with the PNC regime.

I wish to thank the GNI member who voluntarily sent me a PDF copy of this enlightening but expensive book. He knows who he is.

FM
Last edited by Former Member

Finished reading "The Book Thief" by Markus Zusak.

This is a heart-wrenching and gut-wrenching novel set in a small German town during World War 2. As expected, there is plenty brutality in the story, but there is much beauty, compassion and human solidarity too.

For me, the most unusual feature is the narrator whom I didn't expect but whom I will definitely meet personally sooner or later --- Death.

Death, who I am reminded is just as all-knowing and all-powerful as the Creator, tells the story compellingly from start to finish.

The reader learns that not every German citizen had shared Adolf Hitler's maniacal bigotry against Jews and other non-Aryans. The reader learns about the limitless compassion of Hans and Rosa Hubermann who became foster parents to a stranger, a 9-year-old girl, and who risked their lives to shelter another stranger, a Jew, in their home.

The central figure in the story, of course, is the girl, Liesel, who acquired the dubious character of the book thief. I cannot imagine a reader who would not love her.

 

 

FM

Finished reading "BHAGAT SINGH: An Immortal Revolutionary of India" by Bhawan Singh Rana.

The struggle for India's independence was more than Mahatma Gandhi, Jawaharlal Nehru and Mohamed Ali Jinnah. There were other freedom fighters like Subhash Chandra Bose, Lala Lajpat Rai and Bhagat Singh.

The British colonial government of India hanged Bhagat Singh in 1931 for killing a police officer.

Bhagat had killed the police officer in revenge for the violent death of the revered Lala Lajpat Rai who was leading a peaceful march two years before. Bhagat spent two years in prison before he was tried and hanged at age 23.

He had joined the freedom struggle in his early teens and had won widespread admiration for his bravery and dedication. He had formed his own political party, aiming to drive the British out of India even by force and set up a socialist republic.

While in prison he was visited often by Jawaharlal Nehru and got goodwill messages from Motilal Nehru.

Bhagat Singh is regarded today in India as a legend, a folk hero.

 

FM

Finished reading "The American" by Henry James.

This novel was first published in 1876 and is set mainly in France a few years before that.

An unmarried American millionaire is vacationing in Paris and meets a young widow whose aristocratic family traces its lineage to one of the Crusaders.

He wants to marry the woman but there is a fine big issue, as his wealth was not derived from aristocratic roots but through commerce. Read this book and you'll see how much the 19th century aristocracy despised the mercantile class.

You can download a free PDF copy from www.free-eBooks.net and, you can transfer it to your Kindle e-reader if desired.

The American

FM
Originally Posted by Miraver:
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:
Originally Posted by Miraver:

I just got, "When Fish Fly" by John Yokoyama and Joseph Michelli. 

Tell us about it when you finish reading. The title suggests a lot.

The gist of the book: How to give world famous service to all with whom you come in contact. 

 

I'm still reading it.

Thanks for the update, Miraver. I get the idea.

FM

Finished reading "The Bookseller of Kabul" by Åsne Seierstad.

Seierstad, a Norwegian journalist, covered momentous events in Afghanistan shortly after September 11, 2001. She was there when the fearsome Taliban regime fell. That regime had prohibited books other than Islamic ones, films, music...everything considered Western.

In the capital Kabul Seierstad visited a bookshop and met its owner, Shah Muhammad Rais. She decided to write a book on Rais and got permission to embed herself at his home. This is the story of the Rais family, in which the bookseller gets a fictional name, Sultan Khan.

 

FM

Marco Polo was a 13th century Italian explorer who traveled all the way to Beijing and passed through many countries. He wrote a book which we know today as "Travels of Marco Polo."

Christopher Columbus was a ...well, you should know him.

This photo shows two pages of Columbus's copy of Polo's book, printed in Latin. You can see Columbus's handwriting in the margins.

FM

Finished reading "To the Lighthouse" by Virginia Woolf.

This novel, first published in 1927, focuses on a large family's stay on the Isle of Skye in Scotland between 1910 and 1920. It's not my usual kind of novel. Most of it is "stream of consciousness" stuff, but I must admit the book is a rewarding read. No wonder TIME magazine selected it as one of the 100 best English language novels of the last century.

 

FM
 
Warrior, I know you mean well, but same like in GY, when we think of only one race, we are all screwed...
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:
Originally Posted by warrior:
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:
Originally Posted by Sunil:

Did you see the Motocycle diaries of Che?

Yes, Sunil. And I read the book too.

I also read Che's Bolivian and Congo diaries.

In December 1969, I read REMINISCENCES OF THE CUBAN REVOLUTIONARY WAR by Ernesto Che Guevara. I was 18 years old and impressionable. That book changed my life with the result that I joined a leftist political party and became an activist for many years.

so you a commie

Warrior, where reading is concerned I'm open-minded. Some of my favorite authors were apologists for colonialism and imperialism. Just two examples: Rudyard Kipling and H. Rider Haggard. I love good writing, regardless of ideology.

just joking my brother

 

Tola

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