Pages

Net Galley Challenge

Challenge Participant

Saturday, June 30, 2012

A cooking life





Having read the first chapter, I can now guess that the book cover has Berbere spread, in which the title is written in perfect alphabets. Its a touching search for his mother who passed away when he was 3. I almost teared up at the end of first chapter.
As I read the wordy letters of some dishes, I am reminded that Ikea food too is from the place where the author grew up. The author's first encounter with management of pantry began at his grandmother's house.
Before jumping into cooking dream full time, the author had another dream- soccer. A playground which looks down upon underbuilt even if skilled.
Its the professional kitchens where the interns and the novices are to bow a 'Yes, Chef' for everything, that the title of the book is derived from.
The division of the book into three chapters boy, chef and man says it all. That it’s a bildungsroman. By the end of his boyhood, he owned a coveted set of cooking knives and a kitchen boy experience at a restaurant. That’s telling of where the boy is headed. Geographically, he wanted to get to France. In the meantime, he went to top restaurants in Switzerland, NY.  While in NY, he took the place in. The diversity of NY expanded his palate. From his mentors he learnt how to meld international flavours into existing traditions. With his focus on learning as much as he could, by the age of 24, he became the head of a three star kitchen. He arrived.
Having reached his goal, hurtling through a pregnancy and two funerals that he couldn’t attend, at a QA with cooking students, ‘What are some of the modern cooking trends in Africa?’ was the tipping point. His search to find his roots became his diving board into manhood too where the self he had made until then had a hefty price attached to it as it was under another person’s tutelage. Everywhere he goes, he cooks to show ‘honor, respect and love’. His food was appreciated by awards, TV show win, preparing state dinner. His restaurant ‘Red Rooster’ is about letting the past and present speak from the same place. Just like in his life where he embraced his past by taking up the responsibility of his natural father's family from another marriage.
Chef Samuelsson’s life is similar to the others in the hours that he had to put in scut work. His life is different too from other chefs. We hear how it is tough for chefs to have a life. The author got around it by getting to the top fast and then found time to tie up the lose ends in his life – finding identity, building family bonds.
In the kitchen, he learns of the rituals where mentors let the best stage at other famous kitchens. Demographics in there.


Wednesday, June 20, 2012

American trait




Author: Jack Hitt

Gungywamp was sought out and placed in history by an amateur.

The author began the book with Ben Franklin and ended with it. Towards the end we are introduced to Claude-Anne Lopez. Her life story summary is interesting enough that we don’t ask why we need to know about her until we recall after few pages that the lady we just read of is a biographer of Franklin. The author is skilled at story telling.
There is a conflict in the book between trying to be exhaustive about a topic – rare birdwatching, race, skywatching and not to forget that all this has to be viewed with the lens of amateurism. The subtitle ‘a search for the American character’ is a catchall for the variety of the book. For the amazing content, I can overlook the ‘the case of curious title’ as miscataloging (who would have thunk that there’s no need of a u).
The first chapter looks at Franklin Vs John Adams that goes like Frederick Vs Voltaire each at odds with the others behavior. When I caught sight of ‘Ivory bill’, I couldn’t brace myself to read about it.  When there is a talk of this bird, fuzzy is not far. It is not clear if this bird is alive or not. The proof is a grainy video which has been questioned by many amateurs. In each chapter the author talks of the reigning theories and the dents made in them by amateurs.
The book is result of Immersive journalism. Where the author follows amateurs – birdwatchers in chase of ivory bill, extracting DNA using cleverly rigged gadgets instead of the expensive equipment used in lab, astronomers in search of a good ‘seeing’ and making lenses with them.
In the race chapter, the author questions flimsy claims and has a paragraph that lists all the biases that we could be prone to while analyzing data. Kennewick man is shown as one such multi-biased case and an example of how floating symbols can be weaved into different cultures to support their ‘manifest destinies’.
Amateurism is not only about clever individuals but collaboration among many of them on a scale made possible by the today’s ‘open-source’ – bioweather maps, Galaxy zoo.
The author has a way of keeping a thread running among the chapters – the power of myth in the Gungywampers case, Native American origin tale involving ice, the myth of Ivory Bill’s continued existence. That said there are some leaps in the narrative that we can overlook for the book’s far reach.
To live in a world where another discovery changes our history, but do we all recalibrate ourselves with that new knowledge? Before I heard of the Clovis, I thought that America was very young and with the pre-Clovis and a harmless T-rex, I can imagine a story with a T-rex in an unlikely friendship with another animal but with the man, we will probably keep looking for an evidence that explains all the migrations of the Neanderthal man or we’ll just look up to the sky until we meet our future – ET.
Hail the people with DIY in their genes!

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Becoming of a curator




Author: Darcy Lockman


When we follow famous legal cases, sometimes we hear that the defendant was deemed unfit for trial. It is interesting to know of the procedure used to reach that conclusion. While the author is sharing her experiences in an internship at a hospital, she also supplements the branches of psychiatry with their history.
Most of the book is about evaluations of a patient's mental status. There are two kinds, one which the author calls the talking cases where you talk to the patient to see their readiness for discharge and their assessment of the situation. In the other as a consultant liaison, we learn of cases where the CL has to assess how the mental health of the patient is affecting the medical treatment the patient is undergoing. In some cases, the book does seem like retelling of what happened as an advisor looking for more analysis in the notes complains.
I find that sarcasm being a sign of intelligence in a mental evaluation, points to how our complex talk can reflect the working of our mind.
Throughout the internship, the author is enraged that psychoanalysis is not given its due. She decries the use of meds as they don't make a patient capable of independent life.
An internship is a before-after experience. True to that expectation, when the author enters the Kings County hospital she feels ignorant but at the end of it she realizes that she can make a difference.
The books format of snapshots of the cases leaves the reader looking for closure for each case which does not arrive in all the cases because of the nature of the hospital where discharges happen without psychiatrist's goodbyes.
But what of mind is ever simple and organized, thus goes a memoir like a montage of myriad ways heads can go wrong. Quotes on the mental states by some authors is not surprising considering the inordinate amounts of time they spend thinking about the human condition. I hope the quotes are only for comment sake and not part of the `treatment plan'.

Sunday, June 17, 2012

In Indian

the Vietnamese girl

would be called

Meenakshi

-eyes of a fish.


***********


Bunny is a cute cat

with slightly round face

easy to figure skin colors

black and white.

Not the stripes,

no angular face bones.


Humor has its hike boots on




Author: Hape Kerkeling

I have some idea of the pilgrimage to the end of the world from 'Off the road: A modern day walk down the pilgrims route into Spain' by Jack Hitt.
This traveler is having way too much fun - staying at hotels, taking off from the walking for a movie. I have to follow the journey of his self discovery.
He is down to earth in terms of spirituality. Oh oh! This route aint easy with mischievous people giving wrong directions. Now that I have seen the scallop symbol, I will recognise the path. Butterflies as trail markers. whatever works.
I am now lined up with the date at the bottom of the page.

read by June 21, 2010
4/5


After liking this book, I was interested in  reading 
It wasnt captive.

A motley expression




Author: Kristina van dykes

Ladislas Segy, an expert on modern and African art writes in his book African sculpture, that for a background of it, one needs to explore a dozen different branches of science - the history of African kingdoms, archeology, ethnology, anthropology, the study of mythology, folklore, linguistics, ethno- psychology, psychoanalysis.

The objects with their simplicity and unity are well described as for their source and purpose. The fact that contributions are not from a single author goes to show the wide range of expertise required to understand African art.

Kuba cups and Divination pestle from Luba with pictures of real people and their coiffures showing the inspiration point, show how the art derives from their way of life.

When objects serve as authority or status symbol, the rituals involved are explained.

Shoulder masks. Multi- Figure altar. Caryatid stool. Serpent sculpture. Aesthetically these were totally new to me.

Staff from Kongo is a story in wood.


June 27, 2010


5/5

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

How food moved from hearth to the restaurant




Author: Adam Gopnik

If you look at the contents, there's many emails to Elizabeth Robins Pennell. Initially I thought she might be an expert whose views are welcomed by the author in to his book like a field reporter back to the TV station or the call to the expert on 'who wants to be a millionaire'. This aspect of the book comes into life progressively. Even with the passivity of a relation between an admirer and his dead literary idol, the dissonance of an irredeemable past and the author's reaction to it pulses the one way communication with human pathos.

The author writes about the history of the restaurant not from when it was a restaurant but how preexisting cafe culture had to be merged into it to thrive. He also breaks myths about WW and restaurant timeline.

All appetites have their illusions, which are part of their pleasure. The author feels that the cookbooks stoke a fire in the readers that they know is not a wave that is success-ably ridable.

Is the mystery of good cooking - talent or a secret ingredient and is the chef willing to share it? Being in the critic business, he makes us see the ambiguity of taste and the writing we use to describe food and wine.
 His entry pass takes him to may places where he learns of the latest in modern cuisine. A NZ study about food miles and energy involved is counter-intuitive. What El Bulli is closing?

When you are cooking, do you find yourself capable of anything else? I find myself going back to the recipe to see if I missed anything.

Like species of plants and animals that go extinct, spices like Silphium too face a similar fate.

I hadnt read of Adam Gopnik except for a line of his quoted in How to cook like a man. This book links us to another food author Lisa Abend.

Monday, June 11, 2012

Out of 'The Great Gatsby' what does a daisy mean?





The myths associated with different flowers and their meanings are the crux of this book. The author writes how the flowers get their meaning by their behavior like the Camellia standing for 'an everlasting union between lovers' as its calyx falls with the petals unlike in other flowers where it stays even after the flower dies or by the games played with the flowers. To make the flowers hold so much charm in them, like the gifts given to Perseus, takes us into a magical world. Imagine every Irish girl of a time always remembering to put clover in her shoes before walking down the aisle.
I didnt like a perfume used by an old lady at the apartment office. I think it was Gardenias. But when I get there I might like it too for its help in treating 'menopausal symptoms of insomnia, depression and headaches'.
Thus reading when I came across Carnation, I couldnt wait for its story and significance. Its like waiting for your Zodiac sign. We had them in our house for our baby's cradle ceremony and befittingly they stand for maternal love.
If next time someone attempts to get you to kiss unwillingly  under a Mistletoe, dont forget to look for the berries.
Up until now I thought only Sunflower did the solar blooming. Its a surprise that many others like HeliotropeDaisy follow the sun.

St Chad of Mercia

Sunday, June 10, 2012

From the tagine land




Today I had chicken Fantasia for lunch. It had tomao sauce around brown rice and chicken all over. Mourad says that when Moroccan food is served in big platters, that is how it is. Sauce all around, vegetables at the center and meat underneath. You work into the center finishing the sauce. The author gets us acquainted with how you eat a plate and serve a guest. The spices used in Moroccan spices are used in many other cuisines, so its not the spices, the author says but how they are used that make a dish Moroccan.

Couscous can be made with hands and at homeWarqa

 Bored with the classics, he came up with zaalouk a different way of cooking eggplants than the Baba ghanoush that we are familiar with. The author is not afraid of stirring up things by trying out different ways, but in the end he goes by what his restaurant patrons like.

The author provides us with alternative ways of retaining the essence by urging us to buy Air Chilled Chicken. Meat lovers will find ways of communicating with butcher, if you follow his suggestions of how to order meat. I hadn't heard of lamb chops until I came to the US and the author explains why it might be so. Next time if you are near a hamaam, check if they have tangias cooking away somewhere.

Icecream with fig leaves?

Basteeya at Aziza.

Presentation: Rolling round thick cheese slices in colorful spices on the side. 

Thursday, June 7, 2012

The strange land of babies




Author: Anne Enright

The author goes to literature (Kafka's cockroach man) and painting (Rouault) in her freakish moments of trying to absorb the motherhood quirks.
Pelvis as chalice.
Waiting for the water to break she feels like a Burco boiler  with the tap left open.

The author when slipping into sleeps describes it as 'I have untied my little boat and gone floating downstream'. How relaxing is that. All those days when sleep is hard to arrive, we might be stuck in the dock with many other boats around. This morning during the shower, I imagined myself being in a green forest at that moment.

Kidney dish

Tuesday, June 5, 2012





The author questions the part played by evolution in the beauty adaptation. His inspiration for the book - a commonality in the song of two different species encourages us to keep scrutinising things that interest us.
The shape of a shell. Even when I imagine it, it seems so luscious.
According to him abstract act opens up art and the possibility of its occurrence in things around us even more like how removing the strict rules of form on poetry unshackles it.

Origins of classic foods



Author: Ann_treistman (also author of 73 Ways to Help Your Baby Sleep. Wow everyone has their 2 cents about how to help a baby sleep.) The link has a slideshow for other foods like sundae, mayo (this is what I like best on MacD's)
This is the kind of question one is likely to ask of deviled eggs. What with the egg white solidifying to form nice little saucers of their whipped up yellows. McDonalds fries start from frozen fries for quality control.
For a long time I had Froffles until at a hotel I used a machine to make waffles. Have you used  pancake machines? The elevator button pressing kids have fun punching in a big number to see the assembly line in action. As much fun it is watching a machine do something for a first time, its fun to watch a person make pretzels. While industrialization has made chicken popular, pretzel making machines and bagel making machines 
put stores selling hand crafted goods out of business.
Popcorn and cotton candy machines at fair. With cotton candy, it is funny to know that they were once made by hand, a laborious process.
With chicken fried steak, a cook mistook the order and made it.
Thomas Jefferson has had an influence on American food thinking of mixing hot with cold (baked Alaska), made waffles popular by bringing a machine from France. So did WWII participants bringing with them all the foods hey liked.
Cereals and their intended audience.
If Key lime pie is so easy to make, why havent I made it yet. Besides anything that involves condensed milk can never go wrong.
When I read of Puda as Indian, I asked my husband if he knew about as I never heard of it. He said its an abbreviation Punjab urban development authority like Huda (Hyderabad ...) (All those boards next to big digs) but now it has merged into HMDA. M is for Metropolitan. Back to edible Puda, from the ingredients, it just seems another name for chile.
Comparing meatloaf in essence to Kofta gives me a new angle to look at the meatloaf recipes with and see if they can work for Koftas.
Imagine the times when sugar was scarce.


cake decoration: More than art




Ever wonder how a tiered cake is made. Its supported with dowels. The piping styles of shell, flower and their repetition on the page reminds me of the time I was learning different type of stitches on a piece of cloth. Its amazing to see how with just the basic shells and some creativity how different effects can be brought about.  Interestingly embroidery styles are also used for decorating cakes. Laces you have seen. Eyelets, have you? Smocking??
Making rose buds, translating a 2D projection into a raised 3D calls for more skills than texturing a painting.
Marzipan shaping into fruits is sculpture and painting at work.
The take your breath away skill is 'bridge and extension work and hailspotting'.

Saturday, June 2, 2012

Dont change your mind

After the stove is on. Today I burnt the seasoning for susheela. Reason: My plan was to make poha. While I took out the packet of poha, I realized it was thin poha which is better served fried. So y the time I put that back in the packet and took the puffed rice and soaked it, the seasoning in a hurry got burnt.
Mise en place atleast at a macro level.

Dinner follows menu

Yesterday when I was looking for cilantro, I realized there was spinach in the fridge. Today afternoon, I was all up for making the best of weekend, to make rotis. That spinach image from yesterday subconsciously got married with roti and I said
"We are having palak paratha for dinner".
I have never had it before. Getting a general idea from the recipe, I sauteed the spinach. It finally ended up with so much water, that I didn't have to add any extra. In fact, I kept adding dough to get it to a thicker consistency. While rolling out the parathas, I was amazed at how thin they would roll out and match the pan size. It reminded me of all the gimmicks we used as kids to make soft rotis. Hot water, oil. Like true North Indian style, we had them with thick curds.
The spinach worked into the dough consistently. It was funny in the beginning, a mush feel when my hands encountered soft spinach during the dough preparation.
I am reminded of onion paratha, I used to have 10 years ago (bought from a home kitchen) when I had no kitchen and stayed as a paying guest. Bread and Kissan jam were the go tos.

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Never in a Chef's jacket




Author: Alyssa Shelasky

The author of ‘Apron Anxiety’ is a writer. The way she lands writing assignments is interesting. She is one of those people who seem to be in the right place to find people and things to write about. Almost till half into the book, the author paints a stark picture of her self as an absolute food illiterate, happy making the same kind of sandwiches months together. Her boyfriends turn out to be ‘more imaginative eater’ than her. With one such love a ‘Pioneer Woman’ story where the author relocates for love not to the boondocks but a city nowhere vibrant like New York. She puts herself into the kingdom of food, which is what exactly her fiancé is tied to more than to her. Her foray into the cooking scene with her blog fame involves a brush with ‘foodie mafia’. She finds herself content as a homecook with an apron. In the day of foodie mania where the food world is wowed with foams she sticks to simple delicious food.

Her culinary journey starts with a desire to feed her loved one. As her kitchen confidence increases, so does her audience. Friends and neighbours and so do the emotional ties with them. She is no longer a kitchen-phobe when she cooks for the chefs who work at her fiance’s restaurant. She is open to positive criticism about her cooking. While sharing the stories of her life, she also shares the recipes that let her celebrate or tough out life - a down day with a pizza made from store bought dough (not a purist) to a Rainy Day Rigatoni. She’s an optimist always appreciating how good the place smells after she has cooked something, like that itself was the end result of the kitchen labor.

Once she realizes the power of food, she starts wielding it. The author finds joy in conceptualizing and creating menus. That’s a long way from a person with just a ‘like’ for food to a someone who executes meals with desired colors in mind.

Her realization that ‘everyone hurts and everyone is hungry’ is a credo that makes her want to cook for others to brighten up some lives.

The writing flows smoothly like a batter without any lumps. The author managed to meld the people, food and recipes without overdoing any of them.

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Athletic Ali G




Author: Mark Titus

A general storyline of sports memoirs - a person shows athletic promise, a coach/mentor recognizes the talent and motivates the athlete.
This memoir has none of it. Still the author was part of a team that played in NCAA and NIT basketball games. That's not all of it. The author wrote a successful blog `Club Trillion' and had thousands of fans cheering him wearing his log logo T-shirts towards the end of his 4-year stint at OSU as a bench warmer.
When I picked this book, I even needed help understanding the title, visually I thought he meant more like `don't write me off'. Basketball lingo -Layup, walkon is new to me.

Mark Titus describes in slow detail when he is about to take a shot in the last 15 seconds and plays mind games with the readers about how he did the shot and its outcome.
If the book is not a detailed account of turning points of the games he played during his OSU walk-on time, how moments of glory have been stolen from him, it is 'prank time' where he does not mind pulling one on anyone - coaches, teammates.
From this book, you will take home a different side of athlete unlike the industrious, practicing kind. The author descries how he fit in with the team and how he didn't. Whenever he bemoans a great loss to the team, something wrong has happened to him.

The author notes on his blog that the book is meant for 18-35 age males. Not being a part of that demographic didn't hurt the book but the writing style is not what I usually read. For all the inspiration that the sports athletes are, I now wonder about the writing style of them each.

His story of how he started the `Club Trillion' is interesting. Once he begins explaining the rules of the club membership like a pro, he knows he has arrived. His book romanticises the `truant style' of life (even if just in sports), that will work out for one in a million. Still he has a following, not just from fellow bench warmers, but from people from all walks of life - mechanics.

Similar to college dropout successes and lottery winners, his is a too good to be true story(even if for a little while), but not reproducible. But like them he amassed great funds for charity.

Sunday, May 20, 2012

Very interesting read





The content i.e details of Bernini's sculpture is very interesting to know.

The author makes us look at the sculptures in an expert way by mentioning things like - one sculpture having an inaccurate centre of gravity. The concept of one medium used to look like the other being immoral was new to me.

And just one sentence that I needed to know, about how Bernini viewed his work -' he considered most of his works far inferior to the Beauty that he knew and conceived in his mind'. Bernini's work and his interest in it seems like 'progressive improvement'. So It was interesting to know that he was inspired in a way that didnt stop at one work or with the greater beauty that he saw, he never seems to have been at loss for inspiration.

My favourite is Cornaro Chapel.


Oct 5, 2006, 5/5

Excellent novel




Author: Khaled Hosseini


'The Kite Runner' by Khalid Hosseini is a great novel with exactly all the story and style, all perfect.


If you write like Hosseini, you will never have to think twice before giving your works for anyone to review.


In his official site, Hosseini calls 'Amir', the protagonist. But while reading the book, you would like to call it the story of Amir or that of the Kite Runner or Amir's father and of all the characters in the book. Rarely do you come across a book where each character has been so well etched.


There's so much to say and wonder about his writing style. He introduces you to the world of his characters by use of certain phrases and next time you come across them , since they are no longer new to you , you comfortably get under the skin of his characters.


'Rich' is the word that springs up to your mind when you see lots of words at work describing scenes. This surely is not the kind of description readers have been fed years on, the one which you need to read over again to see whats been told. Writing dialogues comes so natural to him.


In short, Hosseini has learnt the art of using words to work for him in a very infectious way each adding cumulatively to the effect of the next and the previous.


Sep 3, 2005, 5/5

Untroubled




Author: Ana Castillo

Just a little background of New Mexico's history and you will be ready to understand why the connection of the people to the land is different from those of other Native Indians. 'So far from God' shows how having moved away from the land of their ancestors, people fail to connect to it in the same way as their predecessors.
Although it deals with serious issues, it does not fail to make you laugh out loud when weird things happen to Sofi's children and she's still one piece. And all this when you thought you were beginning to feel pity for Sofi beset with troubles for children.

Aug 4, 2007, 5/5
read for a class.

Culture and more




Author: Amy Tan


This book is a yarn spun by four women , Chinese Americans and their mothers who have seen dificult times. It is a good mix of else where and now.

The book of is an easy read. The flow of the book will not let you put it down.

I liked reading about the various practices in China. Their belief in fortune, trying to beget favorable conditions, even when everything is not so right, is fascinating.

Different voices in the book form a bridge between short story and novel forms. Although the distinctness of the voices is not preserved, the matter of the stories are still conveyed in a very interesting manner.


May 19, 2005, 5/5

Broaden




Author: Pico Iyer

Travel is no longer just adventure.

The Accidental Explorer's Guide to Patagonia - Putting it in a very trite way, its about an unbelievably beautiful place.

Canadian Gothic - Adds the dimension of local people(famous and everyday) to place known for its locale.

Travel can be by people driven with an agenda to understand a place, its people's struggles, even if the very first step is trouble.

Peter Hessler - Chasing the Wall - best
Mark Jenkins- The Ghost Road - best

A Fleet One - I would never guess, something on trucks could make it to this list.

Travel to places where story of a person at the same time reveals the nation's plight

Elizabeth Rubin - The Road to Herat
Kira Salak - Places of Darkness - saving mountain gorillas
Paul Salopek - Shattered Sudan


Jul 20, 2009, 4/5

Parents for kids



How Eskimos Keep Their Babies Warm: And Other Adventures in Parenting (from Argentina to Tanzania and everywhere in between)


Author: Mei-ling Hopgood

The author researches into how different nations deal differently regarding the main worries of new parents – how/when to put the baby to sleep, how to get them to eat their veggies, how much of the baby depot should I hoard at home, when to potty train them, when to intervene in kids fights and so on and so forth.

The author uses studies, statistics and others expertise to understand what she finds around the world.

I had heard from a friend that on her trip to Mexico, that she could buy food late into the night. I never thought what that would mean to the sleep of babies when parents feel like getting a late chow on the go. I have read that French children are made to try many foods, so they can widen their palates. The author learnt that the French children are fed the same food that the adults eat. Why train with baby food when they will anyways vie for whats on your plate?

As she learns how things are done differently around the world, the author tries to incorporate them into her life too. Not all of them are feasible, like carrying her baby in a sling like Kenyans, on a flight trip. She finds it like an anti-thesis situation like ‘I like hiking but Er! I am lost, its noon and I’m out of water’.

When she learns of the how, she also looks into the why. The ‘vestibular stimulation’ of babies by carrying them on the mothers is such a great motivator for carrying them so, but how long can we do that?

When it comes to potty training, the author introduces us to the slit pants used in China to facilitate elimination for babies and parents alike, who don’t have to drop everything before the babies soil everything. The author is committed to using the early potty training, customizing the time to the baby’s development unlike, Mayim Bialik who in ‘Beyond the sling’, sings praises of ‘elimination communication’ but never strongly says ’ It worked me, go use it’, instead she cops out that she is not suggesting we follow it.

 Her study also involves the need for parents-child play time, equal involvement of both the parents in the rearing of the child, play time with older kids and no parental guidance,  Structured play Vs free style play.

During high school, I saw a toddler mimic her mom washing clothes, with a mug and a small clothing article of her own. Such partaking of work prepares them for real grown-up life.

The author muses about globalization influencing the said practices. 

Another similar vein book




Do Parents Matter?: Why Japanese Babies Sleep Soundly, Mexican Siblings Don’t Fight, and American Families Should Just Relax

Sunday, May 13, 2012

A face to a voice on NPR





Author: Frank Deford

Sports as he knows it

I have heard a couple of NPR commentaries by Frank Deford. Long time ago, I had heard that one of my classmate’s father was a sportswriter, but never learnt how different his life was from a regular writer.

Frank Deford has reservations about bloggers, game score statisticians and the future of sports journalism. He is not one to keep a secret of them. Being in his game of writing for a long time, he chronicles how one day when his contemporary players are ready to retire and coach, it hits him hard that he is out of place and he cant identify with the music in the locker room.

He shows the regard or lack of it for sportswriting in the recognition it receives in the form of awards. He compares how sportswriting was when he started and how it is now. Then the onslaught of TV and now the internet, obliterate the need of a sportswriter. For a ‘not so bright boy’ he did well by reporting about ‘unusual personalities, or athletic exotica, the Americana of sports, out on the fringes’. He takes us to the time when sportswriters gathered in pressboxes to give the public blow by blow accounts of the games. He also compares how earlier he could meet the athletes in the lockerroom for statements while now they do press meets.

This book thrives on rich characterization of real people. Grantland Rice’s profile is written in such a way that lack of familiarity with Rice does not take away the interest from the piece like that on exclusive clubs at Princeton. The success of his writing must be due to his attempt to ‘humanize commisioners’. As you approach a paragraph regarding his nostalgia for sports and sportswriting of the yore, you can pat your back for realising it that for him sports was always about the people. In his words -‘Nowadays sportswriting is too much about predicting games; then, it was more about revealing human nature’. He uses his writing wand as a justice tool to give every athlete and coach their due. Through his writing on women in sports, I learnt of a new game – Roller Derby. I liked the description of ‘three match game’ that the journalists played. Another game that I havent heard of before.
His initial writing has led him to be a judge for beauty contests. He boasts that
‘you are never going to find another expert writer the equal of yours truly with feet in both the tennis and the pulchritude camps’.
He has reported on all kinds of games. The book has many interesting anecdotes from his years of writing from the stands. On tough subjects, he stood up. He called out ‘Commercial racism’.
Writing about the coverage of sports on road, he became the chronicler of Americana of sports. When he says ‘I wasn’t just writing about Americana. I was Americana.’ Somehow he becomes the snake with its tail in its mouth encompassing the world of sports.



Kiwiland




Author: John Kinsella
A poetry book after a long time.
We learn about kangaroos in and out. A goat. has it ever been treated with so much weight? 

Should mom feed or hold you in womb to mother?




I picked this book as I am always curious to know how the world looks at India. The book turned out to be a great info on In vitro fertilisation and the emotions involved in going through the whole process.

I wonder what it must be like to have your body suffused with hormones externally. The author has described what the medical procedures the genetic mother goes through in the process of IVF. She brings out her disbelief even while going through the process in a foreign territory.

It was a revelation that its not just women who cant conceive that make use of surrogates but also mothers who are prone to miscarriages. She says that everybody knows that first trimester is danger zone, though not that common knowledge – I realize the tenuousness of human life in the foetal stage.

Filhaal - a bollywood take on surrogacy.

Coming to experiences of the author in India, except for the travel urged by her mother in law, she has been mostly inside the vegetarian village of Anand. The author has been to India before to mourn her mother's loss. Her interactions with her surrogate, even without a common language inform her about the surrogate as well as her self.

'The sacred thread' had me in tears when the surrogate mother gave the children away with their protective threads.