Friday, 1 November 2013

****November Books of the Month****


November Books of the Month


Book 1: Helium by Jaspreet Singh


Hardback now £9.99


Review: By Mary Whipple on Amazon (5 out of 5 stars)

“In this ambitious and often exhilarating novel, author Jaspreet Singh explores the world of his main character on many levels while keeping the novel firmly focused on life itself, not just on the speaker's life, but on the grandest and sometimes most horrific aspects of all life--socially, historically, artistically, scientifically, and even cosmically. The speaker, Dr. Raj Kumar, has just returned to Delhi after living in the US for over two decades. He is a professor at Cornell, specializing in rheology, the study of the flow of complex materials, which he describes as "materials with memory." (This is illustrated clearly and more fully in the book.) He is also fascinated with the element of helium, "the noble gas" - a primordial element which "prefers isolation and solitude," as it constantly escapes the earth's gravitational field. However complex this may sound, the speaker uses these images symbolically and successfully throughout the novel as he tries to understand himself and his own search for information about an event which has left him traumatized for more than two decades.

Moving backward and forward through time as his memories return, develop, revise themselves, and then become new memories, Raj Kumar describes his earlier life as an 18-year-old student in 1984, when his most traumatic memory occurred. Returning from a class trip with a few classmates and his favorite professor, a Sikh with whom he has been close, the students learn that Prime Minister Indira Gandhi has been assassinated by two of her bodyguards, both Sikhs. When the train with the students and professor returns to Delhi, an anti-Sikh mob attacks the turban-clad teacher at the station, putting an automobile tire around his shoulders, spraying him with oil, and setting him afire. Raj has never fully recovered from this event.

Years later, when he returns to Delhi, he plans to visit his father, a former high-ranking policeman, along with the widow of his professor in search of some answers. Nelly Singh Kaur, the widow, is about to retire from her job as an archivist. As someone widowed by the anti-Sikh violence in 1984, however, Nelly hopes, in retirement, to compile an oral history that will finally force people to take responsibility for those events. The perpetrators of those horrors have never been punished, no one has ever been held responsible, and no one, apparently, has ever felt any guilt. The alliance of religion and politics, and the existence of religiously based political parties, have allowed perpetrators to feel innocent, as long as their own party has prevailed. The larger issue of personal responsibility on a human level is one of the major themes in this rich and absorbing novel, as Raj tries to deal with his own possible connections to events.

Though the author deals with long-term issues of guilt and innocence throughout the novel, he never mentions the word "soul," substituting instead images of birds and flight to convey freedom from earthly cares. The imagery of rheology and of helium, which also pervades the novel, adds scientific and cosmic elements to the thematic brew. Political changes in India in the past half century are reflected, physically, by the architectural and artistic changes which the author notes throughout, and though he pays homage to author Primo Levi many times during the novel, Singh creates his own style, unique and often thrilling, in this unusually ambitious work, which succeeds in maintaining its pace and its thematic intensity until it bogs down somewhat under the weight of its own themes and images near the end of the book.”


Book 2: Game of Love by Harjinder Singh

Available from:




Overview and Context: The Game of Love tells the story of the Sikhs and their freedom struggles throughout history.  Guru Nanak the first Guru of the Sikhs started the revolution of Sikhs standing up against tyranny and oppression in the 15th century, this movement of freedom struggles has carried on to the present day.

In the post 9/11 world, the words of the 10th Guru, Sri Guru Gobind Singh resonate,

“When all peaceful means have been exhausted it is just to draw the sword” 

The Game of Love portrays the tears, torture and the sacrifices of the Sikhs throughout history, the readers will decide if they are termed freedom fighters, insurgents, militants or the popular word used by oppressive governments to term the brave and courageous.

Review: On Amazon by A. Steatham 5 out of 5 stars

“As a non-practising Christian, I am not interested in religion, other than to better understand how belief systems shape the thinking and actions of those who belong to particular faiths; however, even I found myself feeling incredibly drawn to the the way of being and thinking described in this book.

As a great opponent of injustice, I was incensed by the way Sikhs have been treated over the centuries and, at the same time, I was full of admiration for the way in which they have stayed true to their beliefs and fought to uphold justice and freedom, not only for their own people, but for all communities.

It is so easy to believe what you see on the TV and read in newspapers and form an opinion on who is the 'aggressor' in a given situation; I had very 'western' views of what happened at the Golden Temple - this book clearly explains the truth behind that atrocity and has changed my understanding of what I believed to be 'the truth' as portrayed by the media.

This book is informative and thought-provoking. It gives a good insight into the history of the Sikhs and sets out the basis of their beliefs and why their struggle for justice is so important, not just for them, but for all of us who believe in fairness and equality.”
 
 

 

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