Showing posts with label Book reviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Book reviews. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Cookbook for Christmas!

1. Looking for the perfect Xmas gift for someone who likes to cook?
2. Looking for the perfect Xmas, birthday or "just because" gift for someone who likes to cook AND loves Indian food?
3. Looking for the perfect gift that's easy on the wallet, easy on the eye and absolutely spine-tinglingly deliciously tasty on the palate?

If you answered "yes" to any of the above, then stop looking NOW! Cos I have the perfect gift suggestion. Here is a cookbook that is gorgeous to look at; a book that can compete side by side on your coffee table with all your sophisticated design/art/architecture books; a book that will sit as comfortably on your kitchen counter as you cook, as it will on your bookshelf! It is "Entertaining from an Ethnic Indian Kitchen" by Komali Nunna. 


There are cookbooks that look great, but practically and in theory, they fall apart. They are complicated, difficult to follow and sometimes you wonder........"did the author really test out these recipes"??? But not this one. These are not recipes perfected in a state-of-the-art kitchen by an impersonal chef with a white jacket and pointy hat.... they are simple step-by-step recipes tried and tested by Komali herself, and pictures of her cooking in her own kitchen and in her backyard which makes it down to earth and "real"; recipes that she has honed to perfection over the last 25 years! In fact to prove how simple the recipes are to follow, I mailed one to my son and his partner, neither of them proficient in Indian cooking by any means, and they both looked through it and were thrilled! So there!

It is a complete, comprehensive book with ideas on entertaining including inspiring flower arrangements and table settings for various holidays.
In addition to the usual favorite classic recipes, there are unusual innovative new recipes

The beautifully captured illustrations are so life like the make you want to reach out and grab at the food

Planned menus for different cuisines of India make the job so much easier. How about a Nawabi Hyderabadi dinner......?
or some Dum Biryani for a Mughlai feast?
Here are some dishes I tried right away that were super easy to follow and make. 
Thadka Dal
 and my favorite Okra Fry?
 And then to follow some minty sweet Pudina Tea
 and Masala Chai, which I was not even afraid of spilling on the book because the pages are coated, so if anything spills, you just wipe it off! How cool is that?

The book is choreographed like a graceful dance performance.....all the ingredients - the writing style, the illustrations, the recipe directions, the formatting, the photography, the explanations at the end of Indian ingredients - all come together to create one beautiful product! And if none of this is enough to convince you to gift it to someone, then get it for yourself and stack it along with all your other cookbooks, it will look spectacular!
 And....if you order the book from Komali's website during this holiday season, she will personally autograph it and mail it to you gift wrapped in this block printed paper. 

And for more fabulous recipe ideas visit Komali's blog. So what are you waiting for?



Friday, June 25, 2010

Let's keep it short!


He that loves a book will never want a faithful friend,
a wholesome counselor, a cheerful companion, an effectual comforter. By study, by reading, by thinking, one may innocently divert and pleasantly entertain himself,
as in all weathers, as in all fortunes.
~ Barrow ~
 
Smart man this Barrow! But we don't need Barrow to explain to us the joy of finding a good book, curling up with it - especially on a rainy day with a cuppa nearby - and diving right into it! I can name so many books that have so enthralled me, I have read them in one sitting.....The Fountainhead, The Ship of Gold in the Deep Blue Sea, the Harry Potter series. And these are not small books by any means, the pages run into hundreds and you cannot be in any hurry to finish them. But if you are looking for a quick shot of fun and don't have time or patience to read a novel from cover to cover, then short stories are your answer. Short stories can be as engaging as long novels, and they are instant gratification. No waiting to find out what happens at the end - you can be done with one story in 10 minutes, maybe less.
 
Of late I have started reading short stories only because I don't find the stretch of uniterrupted time I need for a longer novel ( I think my blogging addiction may have something to do with it?). And for a nice read before bedtime, nothing like one or two short stories. So...right now I have 3 collections by my bed on my nightstand, all fabulous but different in their own way, so I can pick and choose who I want to read that night.....
 
Friends in Small Places by Ruskin Bond
This book is a compilation of anecdotes about the colorful people of a small town called Pipalnagar. Keemat Lal, a reluctant police inspector; Uncle Ken, an overgrown bully; Bhabiji, a formidable matriarch of a Punjabi family and many more quirky characters are part of it. As Bond points out, each story is about the not-so-famous people who have yet to attain their 15 minutes of fame! Written in his trademark simple, feel-good style.
The Best of Roald Dahl
This collection of  20 stories brings together some of Dahl's finest works including his well known tales such as Parson's Pleasure, The Visitor, Dip in the Pool, And Madama Rosette amonst others. Each story has that perfect satisfying twist in the tale that makes Dahl the master of the bizarre. Sure to delight your dark, wicked side!
The return of Khokababu by Raindranath Tagore
A neglected wife gains strength from the tragedy of another woman to break free from her own misery in one, while Kabuliwala loves another's daughter as his own in another. A servant gives away his own son to his masters to replace their lost child in the title tale. All stories are sensitive tales of human emotions.

Friday, June 4, 2010

Coffee table books

If you are like me, then you have a weakness for those big, fat, juicy gorgeous coffee table books on interior design. Filled with page after glossy page with stunning photographs, fabulous ideas, great design and brilliant interiors from all over the world, that make you just want to redo your entire house, NOW. I like nothing more than sitting down with a cup of tea, and perusing the pages of these wonderful books. Here are some new arrivals on the coffee table book scene....that I would just LOVE to get my hands on!

The various Caribbean islands offer a valid example of what happens when distinct nations colonize new territories. The built world, thankfully, provides trace evidence of all that. And that evidence is what Michael Connors sifts through so beautifully in this book. In its surviving houses, the Caribbean archipelago still yields a centuries-long epic of empire expansion by the Spanish, Dutch, English, French and Danes
Sons often write about their fathers, but rarely do they produce the kind of illustrated memoir — or telling monograph — that Ashley Hicks generously offers here. Hicks the elder was the celebrated David, the towering twentieth century design phenom whose love of bold geometric pattern, vibrating color palettes and nostalgia-infused modernism remains widely influential. Hicks the younger is also a highly regarded designer and writer. He documents his father’s career and life at home: early clients such as Helena Rubinstein and Vidal Sassoon, his marriage to Lady Pamela Mountbatten, their children, much-photographed family residences, vicissitudes of the design business and the Hicks brand, an obsession with gardens and, always, the need to create private worlds of singular beauty.
What a treat it is to compare and contrast two dwellings inhabited by each designer, revealing different aspects of the same creative spirit. The urban edginess of Vicente Wolf’s Hell’s Kitchen loft contrasts with his cozy refuge at Montauk. Yet his photography collection in both homes reflects a singular vision. Gracing the book cover is Benjamin Noriega-Ortiz’s South Beach “party house,” its palette inspired by Florida and Fiestaware. His Chelsea home, on the other hand, is drenched in white, from sculptural chairs to feathered lamps. The other designers include Renea Abbott, Sue Burgess, Barclay Butera, Eric Cohler, Beverly Jacomini, Stephen Shubel, Christopher Drake and Lee Bierly.
Elizabeth Minchilli understands rustic Italian design from the ground up. The American-born writer and her architect husband, Domenico, who live in Rome, translate their knowledge into what is, thanks to evocative photos by Simon McBride, a beautiful practicum for building or renovating a home in the Tuscan country style. Minchilli discusses the venerable two-story Italian farmhouse, with animals and tool storage at ground level, and hearth and living quarters upstairs. She illuminates artisan techniques used in building, from fieldstone walls and timbered ceilings to terra-cotta tile roofs and terrazzo floors. She waxes practical and poetic about pergolas, wood-burning ovens, and plastering and finishing techniques. For detailed information and insight into what makes those Tuscan houses so appealing, this book is a wonderful resource.
Interior design has very few masters, but Jacques Grange is unarguably one. In part, that’s due to the tradition that shaped him: Henri Samuel, Didier Aaron, Madeleine Castaing, the Vicomtesse de Noailles, the Rothschilds and so on. In part it’s due to Grange’s remarkable eye for shape, color, proportion and material. Over the years, his client roster has included Yves Saint Laurent, Princess Caroline of Monaco and Valentino — all, like him, endowed with celebrated aesthetic sensibilities and lives of unquestioned opulence. This most memorable book tours the remarkable interiors Grange has designed for an A-list clientele. Notable for blending periods and styles from divided worlds, his interiors are improbably beautiful.
This tome on the dramatic design work of Colombian-born Juan Montoya, with text by Elizabeth Gaynor, dazzles with over two dozen of his masterful projects.
Visionary architect Bobby McAlpine of McAlpine Tankersley explores the concept of home as emotional fortress. Well written with Susan Sully and featuring Mick Hales’ photography of the firm’s “romantic houses,” this is a landmark design book.
Paula S. Wallace, the president of the Savannah College of Art and Design, showcases the American porch as an iconic architectural feature. She writes with insight about “outdoor rooms” across the country and offers tips on creating one.
Designer John Stefanidis invites us inside his sun-drenched Hellenic hideaway, where he complements majestic sea views with a thoughtfully selected array of furnishings — his brand of Greek chic.
Chicago designer Alessandra Branca taps into her roots in Rome, including her legacy as the granddaughter of a Vatican Museum art historian, to integrate elements of classical beauty into modern life. Wonderful photography by Thibault Jeanson showcases her work.
Parallel to China's rapid economic growth is a boom in the decorative and fine arts, in interior design, and in architecture. This book showcases some of the most exciting examples of the new wave of Chinese design through the stunning photography of Michael Freeman and the perceptive commentaries and interviews of Chinese journalist Xiao Dan Wang.
India's visual culture is ruled by bright colours, religious decoration and the unrelenting heat of the sun, and designers have responded to this challenge in many ways over the centuries. With this book as guide, you can wander into the restored splendour of ancient Maharajas' palaces, enjoy living in houseboats on the lotus-covered lakes of Kashmir, or cool off in imposing colonial buildings built for British rulers wilting in the tropical heat. This is truly a world of contrasts, as we move from simple but beautifully hand-painted tribal huts to the L.A. influenced home of a Hollywood star, from a Buddhist house in Ladakh to the most original house designed in India by Le Corbusier. All the interiors here are lavishly photographed and documented.







Images via veranda.com and amazon.com

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Curled up with a good book

Here are a few of the books I have read recently..... I highly recommend all of them.

"No onions Nor Garlic" by Srividya Natarajan

One of the funniest books I have read in a long time. It is downright laugh out loud Wodehousian silliness at its best. I took it with me to the spa thinking I could read it while my feet were getting pedicured and polished....bad idea, I kept laughing, and rattling that big pedicure chair and annoying the pedicurist!!! So read it at home in the comfort of your own chair, preferably with a pillow on the floor so you don't hurt yourself falling down and rolling on the floor with laughter. It should appeal to all, but specially to TamBrams familiar with our peculiar lovable  customs and traditions.

Here is what one reader from Mumbai says:

Like most of the kids of my generation, I grew up reading the fantasies and adventure books churned out by Enid Blyton. Many years, authors and countless books later, that magician P.G.Wodehouse hooked me. Many again are the hours I’ve spent curled up with a PGW book for company, lost in his idyllic world that – as the blurb says – will never go stale. I’ve often wondered how it would have been if Blyton or Wodehouse would have written stories in an Indian milieu.

Srividya Natarajan provides the answer to that idle thought. “No Onions Nor Garlic” is as faithful a tribute to P.G.Wodehouse as can be conceived without becoming a parody or a farce. This book could not be called a pale imitation or a spin-off. She has faithfully carried on the stylised sentence construction, grammatical idiosyncrasies and pun-happy prose of the master and taken it a step further. The situational comedy and sundry oddball characters are all there and they pave the way for a book that’s a laugh-riot.

Here’s an excerpt:

"At 4:40, somewhere in the middle of Mount Road, lodged in the bumper – to – bumper like a jezail bullet in an Anglo-Indian colonel’s bottom, was the Pallavan Transport Corporation No. 27A bus that contained Akilan. Well, it did not actually contain him. He hung from the door rail by the tips of two fingers, and bore a poetic resemblance to an over-size jackfruit hanging from the tree by its slender stalk. Only one of his toes was actually resting on the footboard, and a good part of his considerable bulk was travelling outside the bus proper. His dark face, with its plump, lugubrious lower lip was the face of a dromedary that had recently suffered some nameless disappointment."

The story is set in Chennai and the ethos is urban Tamil Nadu to the core. This does not take away anything, but to my mind it adds to the flavour. For the readers not familiar with Chennai and its peculiar ways, this could be a rollicking introduction. For Chennaites, it’ll be déjà vu all the way.

"The Saffron Kitchen" by Yasmin Crowther

Loved this book, kept reminding me of The Kite Runner. Here is a review courtesy Amazon.com

In The Saffron Kitchen, Yasmin Crowther has captured, with uncanny accuracy and grace, the deep confusion and conflict visited upon a mother and her daughter by their respective histories. The mother, Maryam, is an Iranian woman, daughter of a general and member of a well-respected family during the Shah's reign. When she became separated from her family at the start of the revolution and was sheltered chastely overnight by Ali, her father's servant, her life was forever changed. Disowned by her father, she moves to Tehran to become a nurse and then to London, where she meets and marries Edward, a fine and gentle man who adores her. When the story begins, their daughter, Sara, born in England, married to an Englishman, and ignorant of her mother's haunted history, is newly pregnant. When she miscarries, during a dramatic confrontation with her mother and her young Iranian cousin, years of secrets and pretending unravel at last.
Maryam decides to go to Iran, to distance herself from these events. What follows, in Crowther's revelatory manner, is a perfect portrayal of a half-life, one lived only on the surface. Maryam comes into her own when she goes back to her village; the sights, sounds, and smells all beckon to her with their sweet familiarity. England falls away, with all its confusing customs and strange language, as does Edward, with his so very different background. Beckoned by her mother, Sara comes to visit and to ferret out the particulars of her mother's past. The question remains: will Maryam return to Edward and England or stay where she is once again at home?

Crowther writes with great insight about attempting to cast off one's past--and the impossibility of doing so. The saffron kitchen of the title is a lovely evocation, both symbolic and actual, of what gets left behind and of one daughter's willingness to occupy both worlds.


"Three Cups of Tea" by Greg Mortensen and Oliver Relin
 
The inspiring account of one man's campaign to build schools in the most dangerous, remote, and anti- American reaches of Asia

In 1993 Greg Mortenson was the exhausted survivor of a failed attempt to ascend K2, an American climbing bum wandering emaciated and lost through Pakistans Karakoram Himalaya. After he was taken in and nursed back to health by the people of an impoverished Pakistani village, Mortenson promised to return one day and build them a school. From that rash, earnest promise grew one of the most incredible humanitarian campaigns of our timeGreg Mortensons one-man mission to counteract extremism by building schools, especially for girls, throughout the breeding ground of the Taliban.

Award-winning journalist David Oliver Relin has collaborated on this spellbinding account of Mortensons incredible accomplishments in a region where Americans are often feared and hated. In pursuit of his goal, Mortenson has survived kidnapping, fatwas issued by enraged mullahs, repeated death threats, and wrenching separations from his wife and children. But his success speaks for itself. At last count, his Central Asia Institute had built fifty-five schools. Three Cups of Tea is at once an unforgettable adventure and the inspiring true story of how one man really is changing the worldone school at a time.

The Sound of Language by Amulya Malladi

Malladi is a wonderful writer. More: she’s not only a great storyteller, she seems to always have something to say. Consistantly. And her background and her interests and the things she seems to care very deeply about fall in line with the backstory of our times. She has a finger on the contemporary cosmopolitan pulse and together with a talent that is not slight, she weaves all these disparate things into stories that almost anyone will care about.

Her most recent novel, The Sound of Language, illustrates all of these points. In the novel, the Afghani Raihana escapes Kabul to stay with relatives in Denmark, a country that is as damp and cold as Afghanistan can be sunny and warm. In fact, everything is foreign to her, everything tears at her heart. Even the sound of the Danish language which, to Raihana’s ears, sounds like the buzzing of her uncle’s bees.
Raihana connects with an elderly Dane named Gunnar. Gunnar has been left widowed and he needs help looking after the bees that were in his wife’s charge. That is, left to Gunnar, the bees will die. They were not his department. Over the course of a summer of Raihana’s keeping of Gunnar’s bees, the pair forge an unlikely relationship, one that gives both of them solace from their separate heartbreaks, but that their friends and relatives find impossible to stomach.

The Sound of Language is an almost impossibly beautiful book. The coolness of the Danish landscape, juxtaposed against the heat of the immigrant’s heart. Raihana is a stranger in a strange land, of course. But with his own actions and the choices he has made, Gunnar has become almost as much of a stranger as Raihana. And, as seems always to be the case with the very best of this sort of tale, while we begin seeing everything that is different, before very long, we see all that is the same. And not all of those commonalities are good.

Author Mulladi knows these roads. Born and raised in India, she has an engineering degree and worked in Silicon Valley for several years. Though they met and and married in California, Mulladi and her husband, the Dane Søren Rasmussen, moved to Copenhagen from the United States in 2002. In a reading group guide published with the book, Mulladi says she didn’t think that living in Denmark would be much different than living in the United States had been. “Needless to say,” Mulladi writes, “I was wrong.”


I just started on "Stones into Schools", the sequel to "Three Cups of Tea". I hope it will be as absorbing and interesting! But here is a reader's review of it:

I read Three Cups of Tea and was incredibly inspired by Greg Mortenson. His second book is even better in my opinion. Teaching people that they have the power to change themselves is so simple but sometimes takes incredibale amounts of work by other people. Greg and his team have performed incredible acts of bravery, endurance, and dedication to the noble cause of providing education to the girls of Pakistan and Afghanistan. You will not be able to put this book down. You also learn firsthand accounts of the success of many of the first girls to go through Greg's schools.


Read this book for an incredible account of an individual who has changed the world for so many people.