Wednesday, October 31, 2018

The Silent Dead

The Silent Dead (Reiko Himekawa, #1)The Silent Dead by Tetsuya Honda
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

The book started on a very promising note for me. I enjoyed a large part of the book but the effect diminished at the climax.

Reiko Himekaway is a young, female Lieutant in the police force who delas with the gender bias regularly. Her reasons for becoming a lieutant have a background which is also an essential sub plot in the book. But the primary plot of the book deals with a serial killer who is torturing people and disposing bodies in lakes. Reiko and Stubby(another lieutant's) diverse styles in trying to nab the killer is interesting. The way he admonishes Reiko for her intuitions because she seem to stop applying logic after her bout of intuition is one of the best conversations in the book.


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Binary

BinaryBinary by John Lange
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Picked this book solely because I was surprised that its actually a Crichton book. Once upon a time Crichton used the pen name John Lange.

A very fast read; it deals with the personal complexity that arises between state department officer John Graves as he investigates a right wing businessman, John Wright. Graves is sure Wright is planning a big assault but takes sometime to unearth the plot. He also takes the challenge to unravel Wright as a personal one since Wright seems to be playing with his poker genius brain at a game.


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Tuesday, September 18, 2018

Keepers of the Kalachakra

Keepers of the KalachakraKeepers of the Kalachakra by Ashwin Sanghi
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Dan Brown gave me the history-fiction genre and I have never stopped hence. When I need a quick read I usually pick up this genre.

Ashwin Sanghi, this time around talks about the concept of Kalachakra. As the heads of state are killed without leaving any trace of the murder the intelligence orgs all over the world are puzzled. In a supposedly independent track, Vijay, a Ph.D. student is hired by a shady company to continue his research for them. But obviously all is not as it seems.

A fast paced read when you want to just go around learning a few things about the Indian/Buddhist mythology.


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Wednesday, September 12, 2018

Contact

ContactContact by Carl Sagan
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

My first Carl Sagan book :)
I have never understood why I am such an ardent fiction fan. I devour science fiction so happily as I do Lord of the Rings. I don't understand any of the inter-galactic concepts, am almost primate in my understanding of Einstein, Planck, etc. theories but that doesn’t deter me from thoroughly enjoying science fiction.

Ellie, a radio astronomer is deeply committed to the Argus project which is about listening on different frequencies to search for messages from some other beings. Just as the project is to be shut down, there arrives a message. At first it seems to be an aberration but soon the world joins in and starts noting down the message. It soon reveals itself to be the blueprint of a machine. A machine that probably would take us to them. It gets built and Ellie is one of the chosen five to represent humanity to the other beings. They succeed. Or so they think! When they narrate their experience back on earth it is not taken seriously for they have absolutely no proof.

I particularly like the ending, because the end conversation between Kitz and Ellie is identical to the conversation between Ellie and Rankin/Joss with the tables turned. In Kitz-Ellie conversation Ellie is trying to prove a point to disapprove the hoax theory while Kitz is skeptical to anything she has to say because it’s not backed up by data and in the other case Ellie is the one skeptical of religion/God because others have no data points.

Some personal favourite lines from the book –

I have always thought an agnostic is an atheist without the courage of his convictions.

I know we all have emotions but let’s bear in mind exactly what emotions are. They are motivations for adaptive behaviour from a time when we were too stupid to figure things out.

You are not worried about being lost, Palmer. You are worried about not being central, not the reason the universe was created. There's plenty of order in my universe. Gravitation, electromagnetism, quantum mechanics, superunification, they all involve laws. And as for behaviour, why can't we figure out what's in our best interest-as a species?

Isn't a gram of observation worth a ton of theory?


Update:
Watched the movie that was based on the book. Like all movies that are made from books, it could not create the magic the book did.I cringed at the romantic liaison between Ellie and Plamer......but then got over it simply because Matthew McConaughey played the role :D


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Monday, August 20, 2018

Mandodari: Queen of Lanka

Mandodari: Queen of LankaMandodari: Queen of Lanka by Manini J. Anandani
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

Ramayana from the point of view of Ravan's wife. I was expecting a different perspective but it seemed to be the same old story telling of Ramayana. Hence, didn't find it interesting.


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Artemis

ArtemisArtemis by Andy Weir
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Jazz is estranged from her father and works as a delivery agent in a future world where humans have created a colony on the moon- Artemis. The book is about the brilliant Jazz trying to pull off a heist for some quick money but ends up endangering everything that she holds dear, including life on Artemis.

It is or the sci-fi lovers, with a great deal of physics and chemistry information strewn all over the place. Quite an interesting read.


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Thursday, July 5, 2018

Sleeping Beauties

Sleeping BeautiesSleeping Beauties by Stephen King
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

There is a sleeping sickness outbreak in the world. The only casualties are woman of all age groups. Once a woman goes to sleep, she doesn't get up. There is a protective cocoon that engulfs the sleeping women and anyone who forcefully tries to wake them up is in for a rude surprise.

What is this cocoon? Will the women wake up? What if they don't? What role does a small place like Dooling have to do with the future of humankind?

A fantasy novel and a huge one.


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Monday, June 18, 2018

Shanta : The Story of Rama's Sister

Shanta : The Story of Rama's SisterShanta : The Story of Rama's Sister by Anand Neelakantan
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

A quick read about Dashratha's first born and the heir to Ayodhya. However in an era where heirs are only male, she gets adopted by another king who asks her help to end the drought in his kingdom.
Not worrying about authenticity it was just surprising to read about an existence that I never knew in the supremely famous world of Ramayana.


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Monday, April 23, 2018

Malice

MaliceMalice by Keigo Higashino
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Its a thriller where the killer gets caught mid-way thru the book, the next quarter is about establishing his motives. What then forms the last quarter of the book? One has to read to understand the twists and turns the book goes through.
Guess Mr.Higashino has figured a way out to keep me enticed with anything he writes :)


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A Bank for the Buck

A Bank for the BuckA Bank for the Buck by Tamal Bandopadhyaya
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

The birth and growth of HDFC bank well captured in a book.


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Thursday, April 19, 2018

Origin

Origin (Robert Langdon, #5)Origin by Dan Brown
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Where do we come from? Where are we going?

The fundamental questions that plague humankind forms the basis of this thriller. It has all the Dan Brown ingredients - code, history, religion and an elusive mastermind killer.

Edmond Kirsch is technology's prodigal son. He is killed just when he is about to make the announcement that he promises would change the world. Its left to Robert Langdon and curator Ambra Vidal to get the secret to people. Ambra is the fiance of Spain's prince who is also a prime suspect for Kirsch's murder.

Combining history with todays keywords of AI, qunatum computing, etc Dan Brown has created a fast paced thriller.


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Monday, March 12, 2018

Twisted

Author: Jeffrey Deaver
Genre: Fiction, Short stories

A fantastic collection of short stories for the thriller lovers.

A Midsummer's Equation

A Midsummer's EquationA Midsummer's Equation by Keigo Higashino
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I choose to read all Keigo Higashino books simply because I like the way his books are :)

A very nice paragraph from the end of the book -
Every problem has a solution but there is no gurantee that the solution will be found immediately. The same holds true in out lives. We encounter several problems to which the solutions are not immediately apparent in life. There is value to be had in worrying about those problems when you get to them. But never feel rushed. Often, in order to find the answer, you need time to grow first. That's why we apply ourselves, and learn as we go.


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Wednesday, February 21, 2018

The Three Ravens

The Three RavensThe Three Ravens by Ed Kirwan
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

A quick thriller for the inherent fiction fan in me. The world is under threat from a nuclear explosion and only the three most brilliant people can stop it. They must overcome adversaries who are at powerful positions and always a step ahead of them.




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Zero to One

Zero to One: Notes on Startups, or How to Build the FutureZero to One: Notes on Startups, or How to Build the Future by Peter Thiel
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A very interesting book. Usually I find management books a drag but the ideas and anecdotes shared by the founder of PayPal makes this interesting.


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Thursday, February 8, 2018

The Rogue Lawyer

Rogue LawyerRogue Lawyer by John Grisham
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Sebastian Rudd is a lawyer who will not let truth come in the way of justice. This is how the book is advertised and its an interesting mix of plots with Rudd being the central character in each. An engaging quick read, not Grisham's best but it does have its page turning moments.


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The rooster bar

John Grisham, Fiction

The Rooster BarThe Rooster Bar by John Grisham
My rating: 1 of 5 stars

Grisham uses the educational loan crisis in US as an example to create a plot where 3 friends start practicing law without actually graduating. Hoodwinking the system is the primary plot. Though it sounds interesting it's not like usual Grisham novels. It needed efforts to finish this one off


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