Tuesday, March 20, 2018

Rambharosar Motorgari

The miserly hardfisted Rambharosa Agarwal, an affluent businessman of Herbertgunj wants to lead a life of piling money but for his wife and son who want to have their own family car. Their insistence gets the better of him and he agrees to purchase one. Happy at the prospects, Suresh, the son, immediately gets some catalogues and shows his dad. But hearing the price of the vehicles that runs in lakhs, Rambharosa is shell shocked. But as he had already promised, Rambharosa cannot take back his word. So he gets hold of an agent to buy a second hand car. With his bare minimum budget of just 10000, what happens next is a hilarious comedy full of merriment and fun. Though somewhat predictable at times, but the best thing of the story is its fast paced refreshing humour with its comically colourful characters that freshens up the mind while enlivening the reading moments.

Thursday, March 15, 2018

P(n)achti Rahasya Upanyas

I will be grateful to the fan of the author who was buying a copy of this particular book standing just beside me at the Bookfair. On my enquir about whether the book is good, she told that she did not really know but other works of the author are quality products. So I bought it partly due to her comments, more so as it is a mystery compilation but never in my remotest thinking I considered it to be at all worth. Well, it was to be proven far from correct as the mystery novellas in the volume are breathtakingly beautiful. Consisting of five novellas

  • Ek Tukro Megh
  • Garita Gelo Kothae
  • Choker Baire
  • Chokher Arale
  • Angule Atatayir Naam
the volume introduces Wrishi aka Saptarshi Dasgupta as the freshest face in the world of mystery fictions with his cousin Shreya acting as his satellite though remaining absent sometimes in the investigations just like Topshe who was sometimes kept in the dark by Feluda while on track of a criminal. Wrishi not only smokes but also keeps a diary just like Mr. Mitra did during the early days of his career as a budding detective. But these are just some minor details but the actual stories will keep you gripped the lines till the criminals are revealed.
The first story ushers Wrishi to the correct path in his career and as he matures so does the cases which includes murder too. In each of them the sleuth uses his power of deductions from the observed clues and finds evidence to corroborate them much in the same way of the styles of the traditional masters of the trade and this seems to revive the spirit which is unfortunately dying in these days of fast paced adventures where logic takes a backseat quite often. But there is some complain that might be said. Leaving all other things, the help from police seems unrealistically always true and there is an unrealness in the sudden maturity of Wrishi as the cases come. But it must also be said that such a refreshing volume of pure mystery laced with a touch of humour made me want for more and also made me an immediate fan of the sleuth.

Sunday, March 11, 2018

The Great Tales of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

The versatility of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle can be felt in the pages of this book that comprises stories penned  by the creator of Holmes and Challenger some of which equals if not surpasses his more popular titles. Categorised  as the following the stories are a treasure trove of adventure, fun, terror, history and much more:
  • Tales of the Ring
    1. The Croxley Master
    2. The Lord of Falconbridge
    3. The Fall of Lord Barrymore
    4. The Crime of the Brigadier
    5. The King of the Foxes
    6. The Bully of Brocas Court
  • Tales of Pirates
    1. Captain Sharkey: How the Governor of Saint Kitt's came Home
    2. The Dealings of Captain Sharkey with Stephen Craddock
    3. The Blighting of Sharkey
    4. How Copley Banks slew Captain Sharkey
    5. The “Slapping Sal”
    6. A Pirate of the land (One Crowded Hour)
  • Tales of Blue Water
    1. The Striped Chest
    2. The Captain of the “Polestar”
    3. The Fiend of the Cooperage
    4. Jelland’s Voyage
    5. J. Habakuk Jephson’s Statement
  • Tales of Terror
    1. Horror of the Heights
    2. The Leather Funnel
    3. The New Catacomb
    4. The Case of lady Shannox
    5. The Terror of Blue John Gap
    6. The Brazilian Cat
  • Tales of Twilight and the Unseen
    1. The Brown Hand
    2. The usher of Lea House School
    3. B.24
    4. The Great Keinplatz Experiment
    5. A literary Mosaic
    6. Playing with Fire
    7. The Ring of Thoth
    8. The Los Amigos Fiasco
    9. How It Happened
    10. Lon No. 249
    11. “De Profundis”
    12. The Lift
  • Tales of Long Ago
    1. The Last of the Legions
    2. The Last Galley
    3. Through the Veils
    4. The coming of the Huns
    5. The Contest
    6. The First Cargo
    7. An Iconoclast
    8. Giant Maximin
    9. The Red Star
    10. The Silver Mirror
    11. The Home-Coming
    12. A Point of Contact
The author's fascination for the pugilists and their game and his inclination towards the paranormals are expressed in the volumes in some of the most fantastic stories of the genre that sometimes mixes both with an unique blend. But this does not prevent him to tell science fictions with the similar classic touch. Again, devoid of paranormals, some of the tales of terror are so chilling that it will match a horror story based on the supernaturals. But his mastery seemed at its supreme with the anecdotes of historical fictions that depicts the cruel yet brave world of a time long ago when the earth was defined by the adventures of her heroins and heroes. The cruelty of Captain Sharkey and his downfall (a bit confusing as two different stories hints at two different ways) is depicted in the stories of the seas and other stories also fills in with adventures of sailors each stranger than the other. Humour also finds place in some of the most fun filled misadventures that makes them more refreshing.

Friday, March 09, 2018

Diary of a Pilgrimage

I do not know how to express what I felt going thru this excellent narration that can be considered as a guide to the heart of a German town along with a priceless piece of English humour. Truly a literary wonder it brings forth the true artist in Jerome K Jerome whose use of playful exaggeration of the most normal events makes them appealingly enjoyable. A journey to a German town Oberammergau by two friends to watch the Passion Play could not have been made more interesting than what Jerome has done which also describes the Play and the actors in the simplest of ways devoid of any artificiality yet complete with every detail sketched with the true feelings of the fascinated beholder. Interspersed with his signature style of humour, Jerome has excelled himself than his more popular fiction. Centering on the heart rendering Passion Play, the travelogue that consists of train rides, boat rides is poetically perfect.