Wednesday, January 28, 2009

"Where's your book ?" they say....

Often i have been asked this.... when are you going to write a book .... on the "twisted tales" of tnt ! Of course, i have a standard answer. Most author profiles describe the authors living in a house tucked away in the hills.... or beach houses living a tranquil life writing a few hours a day...

Sigh ! Till i have a house in the hills and a Ramu Kaka to look after my chai needs.... well, my book can wait. But my stories can't ! We have many stories here @ tnt and most of them worth re-telling. Almost prompting me to steal the line from another famous store - "We are not a store, we are a story!"

Since tnt staff is scatterred all over and each one of them know a few stories of their time - i ask you all to help ! please write the stories here - in this blog ... so we can start documenting them. I think i know many, but i also realise that i do not know many ! which i'm discovering !

To start with, i started putting a sequence to - who worked when, what shift @ the store, and realised that i was starting to get dates/ years/ months wrong ! So, please help !

We started with Tejal and Mridula, both part-time, plus Dhiraj and Sanjay and Nirmala. Tejal and Mridula started in Mar 2002, Dhiraj (weekends), Sanjay (thrice a week). Nirmala started in May 2002. Through that year we had Rina, Nandana, Shefali and Shradha - correct ? Shradha - u and tejal need to confirm this.

2003 saw Ashok, Nisha, Samar, Jharna, Saroj and Sameer. Nisha was our first full time employee - joined us in Apr 2003 ? Saroj with Samar and then with Sameer worked on for a year till June 2004 ?

2004 saw Shefali (2nd stint), Rekha, Aarti and Geetanjali.

then i'm little lost. Tia - July 2005 to Mar 2007 ? Now fit the others - Alisha, Akash, Shrikant, Rahul, Sharmista ? the 2 physics boys - friends of shrikant - the 2 Ashishs ?

Now i'm truly lost - Samar, tia, weed, anushree- please put a sequence to this !

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Mail sent today to yahoogroups.

Message sent to twistntales@yahoogroups.com on 21st Jan, 2009

Hi,

Welcome to another round of some really wonderful books and do stock up for the long weekend ahead. Lots of new releases happening again, and we let you know of them as soon as it happens. The latest from Grisham releasing early next week …. And many many more!

“Outliers – The story of success” by Malcolm Gladwell @ Rs. 399/- (pgs 309)

A new offering by best-selling author of “The Tipping Point” and “Blink”, Malcolm Gladwell takes us on a behind the scenes tour of success, breaking it down through statistical analyses. Environment, where one comes from, affords advantages and disadvantages that determine a flourishing future. Through chapters that uses a wide range of examples such as exceptional hockey players, virtuoso musicians, computer programming whizzes, top corporate lawyers and many more, Gladwell makes it plain that its culture, not genius that maketh a successful man.

“Chasing the rabbit – How market leaders outdistance the competition and how great companies can catch up and win” by Steven J. Spear @ Rs 695/- (404 pgs)

High velocity organizations, always leading the race, apply their magic in the fields of cost, speed, service and innovation. “Chasing the rabbit” details self improvement techniques aimed at weeding out problems and inconsistencies, attacking to solve those problems, learning from the solving process and constantly aiming at innovation. Not merely a book on business theory, aimed at organizations, it is a sound source of practical advice for anyone looking to better themselves.

“Panic” edited by Michael Lewis @ Rs. 250/-

With the help of articles, interviews, commentaries and insights from financial gurus such as Jeffery Sachs, Noble prize winning economist Paul Krugman, Joseph Stiglitz and many of his own writings, trader Lewis of Liar’s Poker fame portrays the bipolar nature of the world’s markets. The frenzied, manic phase before a market disaster and the deep depression after, chronicled with opinions from the horses’ mouths.

“The Accidental Theorist and other despatches from the dismal science” by Paul Krugman @ Rs 500/- (pgs 204)

A collection of essays, devoid of economic jargon, math and graphs, and presented in comprehensive English, to appear as non-threatening as possible to the reader. It is aimed at eliminating fallacious depictions of economics as it has often been portrayed. Noble prize winner Krugman wishes to help the layman grasp the beauty and complexity behind economics and to put to rest the propagated erroneous and simplistic beliefs that pervade in popular culture’s portrayal of economics.

“Blood and rage – A cultural history of terrorism” by Michael Burleigh @ Rs 495/- (545 pgs)
A thoroughly complete examination of terrorism, tracing the phenomenon from it’s infancy to its current stage, helping one grasp the answers to the questions “How?”, “When?”, “Why?” Terrorism had its beginnings in the Irish Republican Brotherhood who created for their ends a cult of Fenians, the first terrorists. With support, asylum and funding from benign foreign hosts, a feature it still retains today, terrorism was inaugurated and carried forward by red Russian Nihilists. Burleigh follows the conflict between Jews and Arabs in Palestine, before and after its partition into Israel and the current jihadi dominated nature of terrorism. Entering the terrorist psyche, Burleigh goes through convoluted modern history with a fine tooth comb, weeding out the events and repercussions that fuelled terrorism, gave it character and led to its growth and spread.

“India with Sanjeev Bhaskar” @ Rs. 295/- (pgs 277)

In this volume Bhaskar, one of the chief propagators of British Asian humour in the UK, comes to terms with an India that has consistently baffled him. Travelling through Bombay, Pune, Calcutta, Rishikesh, pens his individualistically poignant yet hilarious observations on India. A rich heritage, but a mostly poor poverty stricken population, mixing Bollywood masala and traditional fervor with equal zest. A recently partitioned, post Independence India, hurtling into a software boom but where cows still walk (most of) the streets. Here is India from the point of view of a Punjabi NRI, born and brought up in working class London, by a family that fondly remembered a pre- partitioned India, where fish and chips reigned over his heart as opposed to the okra, mangoes and spicy curries of his motherland.

“Memories Gold- Writings on Calcutta” @ Rs. 699/- (pgs 538)

“Memories Gold” is a lovely compilation of poetry, prose, essays and stories that capture the thriving complexities of a pulsating, vibrant city. Each piece in this collection portrays a special facet of the multi-dimensional metropolis humming with so much culture, passion so many people and so much rich history. Gurudeb Rabindranath Tagore’s childhood smritis intermingle with Jug Suriya, Amitav Ghosh, Moti Nandi football, Marxists and Durga Poojo. A gold tome the size of two ingots and filled with treasures on that civilization called Calcutta.

“The Business traveller’s guide to the World” @ Rs. 399/- (527 pgs)

A concise checklist of things to do, items and documents you need while travelling to any corner of the globe. The inner cover of the book is a map of the world that indicates what’s to follow. Whether you’re in a quandary regarding the languages spoken in Cambodia or whether you’re wondering if you need a yellow fever vaccination certificate to visit Paraguay this is the book to consult! Histories, geography, sex ratio, GDP, lists of time zones, Internet codes and ISD codes, currencies, capitals (and anything else that’s even remotely relevant to business travel) all packed into one rather wonderful 500 paged volume (that will fit into any carry all or pocketbook!)

Indian Writing

“Slumdog millionaire” by Vikas Swarup @ Rs 270/- (382 pgs)

An elaborately descriptive book that recalls the writing manner of Arvind Adiga in his “White Tiger”, Slumdog Millionaire is narrated by a Dharavi dwelling waiter who has ostensibly hit the jackpot by winning a reality quiz show. Life in Dharavi is always bizarre but his miraculous win ejects the eponymous Ram Mohammad Thomas into an unprecedented realm of the uncanny. Recounting in ascending order, how he knew the answer to each of the twelve questions we infiltrate the heart of Mumbai and bear witness to a one time tiffinboy’s foray into numerous professions and his brushes with Bollywood glitz, brothels, orphanages and finally the police as he is jailed on suspicion of cheating the show.

“Escape” by Manjula Padmanbhan @ Rs 295/- (419 pgs)

In a futuristic era where women have been all but wiped out, one young girl feels the stirrings of adulthood within herself. Initially considered frozen in childhood, she is now seen as dangerously vulnerable in the General controlled world and turns fugitive with her Youngest uncle. On this premise does Onassis award winner Padmanbhan base her richly textured, philosophy-laced metaphorical examination of the coming of age of a young girl. Beautifully written and intensely gripping with lovely manipulation of the language “Escape” is an out of the ordinary read.

“Indian memsahib” by Suchita Malik @ Rs 195/- (195 pgs)

First offering by Dr Suchita Mehta, “Indian memsahib” opens a window into the world of Indian bureaucracy seen through the inexperienced and naïve eyes of a bureaucrat’s wife. Suchita Malik captures the innocence of a wife so obviously yoked to her husband’s livelihood yet longing to make something of herself, with simple language and everyday incidents that give us both an insight into the complex realm of babudom as well the mind of an introspective woman.

“Indian by choice” by Amit Dasgupta @ Rs 395/- (93 pgs)

Endearing illustrations and a story that will strike a chord with many, this is the story of Mandy coming to terms with his identity as an essentially Indian Mandeep, and Indian by choice. Taking the graphic novel approach to the ABCD (American Born Confused Desi) syndrome that hits many of our NRI cousins “Indian by choice” combines story and satire in a fun way. A rapid read with a moral at the end, it retains a gentle irony and a sense of fun all the while!

“Daughters of Shame” by Jasvinder Sanghere @ Rs 295/- (304 pgs)

“Death before dishonor” being the family motto of most Asian families, even in Britain, they fail to acknowledge that many of their daughters would rather choose death than be married of to strangers and give up the right to choose their suitors. Exposing the torturous domestic hardships experienced by numerous Asian women across Britain, Jasvinder Sanghere pens their silent and hitherto secret sufferings hoping to create a wave of change in their deplorable conditions. Forced into a marriage, she escaped and started a life of her own but not before being disowned by her own mother for wanting to be free. Each of these stories will bring a greater understanding of the value of freedom and the value of empowering our womenfolk.

Nature

“Rumbling Island – true stories from the forests of India” by Zai Whitaker @ Rs. 175/- (pgs 111)

Every writer muses, observes, and has beliefs and morals. What sets the contributions in this assortment apart is that they are all the musings, observations, beliefs and morals of fervent naturalists. Mention must be made about the striking cover art depicting a variety of gorgeous fauna. Zai Whitaker (author of “The Boastful Centipede”) compiled and contributed to this collection, which is as diverse and rich as the Indian wildlife it portrays. From a conservationist wanting to discover the social habits of tigers to another following the survival games played by otters, langurs and tiger cubs this book covers everything from reptiles, amphibians big and small birds, mammals and of course the ever present homo sapiens!

“Wild City – Nature wonders next door” – by Ranjit Lal @ Rs. 275/-(pgs 282)

Wild City penetrates the steel girders of our concrete jungle towns to take a closer look at the urban wild life. We city dwellers too share out space with much undomesticated animal life. From the raptors soaring predatorily overhead to pigeons nesting in our AC ducts to survival tactics of cunning urban monkeys and insects galore, Ranjit Lal profiles each and portrays them as spirited individuals, perhaps as human as you or I.

Young Adults:

“Rigmarole and Other Plays” by Sai Paranjpye @ Rs.199/- (pgs 172)Padma Bhushan awardee, director and writer Sai Paranjpye comes out with a collection of three idiosyncratic and delightful plays each with underlying nuances. The Emperor of the United Kingdom of Feathered Friends decrees a poetry competition but to what end? A bug in the Royal throne? Impossible! Suitable for ages 10+ to read, enjoy and perform !

“The Cosmic Detective – exploring the mysteries of our universe” by Dr Mani Bhaumik @ Rs. 199/-(pgs 92)

Dr Mani Bhaumik enlists the sleuthing skills of his young readers to find solutions to cosmic mysteries. How is it that the area around a black hole is very bright even though not even light can escape its gravitational pull? How many mythological characters populate our skies and why do they reside there? Using gorgeous photos and simple descriptions Dr Bhaumik illuminates the often abstract aspects of space and its wondrous wonders.

New books:

“The Untold Charminar – Writings on Hyderabad” edited by Syeda Imam @ Rs 399/-
“America America” by Ethan Canin @Rs. 875/-
“Breaking Dawn” by Stephanie Meyer @Rs. 550/-
“China : A history” by John Keay @ Rs. 395/-
“The Silver Donkey” by Sonya Hartnett @ Rs. 195/-
“Tandoor Cinders” by Vilas Sarang @ Rs. 199/-
“The Woman who thought she was a planet and other stories” by Vandana Singh @ Rs. 275/-
“Twilight” by Azhar Abidi @ Rs. 399/-
“Me and Kaminski” by Daniel Kehlmann and translated by Carol Brown Janeway @ Rs 425/-
“The Canon- the beautiful basics of science” by Natalie Angier @ Rs 399/-
“The Charlemange pursuit” by Steve Berry @ Rs 295/-
“The marriage bureau of rich people” by Farahad Zama @ 295/-
“The Gaudi Key–Unlock the secret of the century” by Esteban Martin &Andreu Carranza @ Rs 195/-
“Say it like Obama – The power of speaking with a purpose and vision” by Shel Leanne @ Rs 375/-
“Girl ology – A girl’s guide to stuff that matters” by Melisa Holmes & Trish Hutchison @ 295/-
“The 24X7 Marriage – smart strategies for good beginnings” by Vijay Nagaswami @ Rs. 250/-
“(Un)settled: Notes from a shifting life” by Kamini Karlekar @ Rs. 295/-
“Private Eye Anonymous – A graphic novel” by Tejas Modak @ Rs. 250/-
“The Wind from the Hills” by Sethu (trs. Prema Jayakumar) @ Rs. 250/-
“The New Paradigm for Financial Markets – the credit crisis of 2008 and what it means” by George Soros @ Rs. 695/-
“Countries of the Body” by Tishani Doshi @ Rs. 150/-
“My family’s favourites” by Marie Noelle (Chotti) D’Souza @ Rs. 600/-
“I am a Special girl” by Amitava Banerjee @ Rs. 195/-
“Divine Justice” by David Baldacci @ Rs. 460/-
“A Mathematical mosaic – patterns and problem solving” by Ravi Vakil @ Rs. 250/-
“Woodwinds of change – The authorized biography of Hariprasad Chaurasia” by Surjit Singh @ Rs. 600/-
“Superstar Babes” by Narinder Dhami @ Rs. 150/-
Bhangra Babes” by Narinder Dhami @ Rs. 150/-
“The return of Depression Economics and the crisis of 2008” by Paul Krugman @ Rs. 399/-
“The Book of Moinuddin Chishti” by Mehru Jaffer @ Rs. 250/-
“The Great Crash 1929” by John Kenneth Galbraith @ Rs. 399/-

That’s a long list of books that have already arrived in the last couple of days …. Do rush in and pick your favourites. See you at the Store,

From the team at,
twistntales

Congratulations !


Aakash - our "yin"ful guy and Sneha have tied the knot ! and are happy to be a weekend couple :-)) Congratulations Aakash and Sneha, as you set up home over many weekends .... in the meantime, home is always @ tnt !




Monday, January 19, 2009

A few online petitions that seem like just causes - forwarded by friends

Petition 2 :
http://www.PetitionOnline.com/sue4000/petition.html

Please open the above and sign petition against mining in Goa while also adding a strong comment. Please also pass this around to your friends in Goa and elsewhere. It would be nice if we could get about 4000 signatures. Maybe that will make the Chief Minister and the goons in the mining industry sit up and take note! To know more about just what mining is doing in Goa



please also visit http://mandgoa.blogspot.com/ You could also visit http://www.savegoa.com/ You may also like watching the film on mining in Goa made late last year by Kurush Canteenwalla at http://infochangeindia.org/Infochange-documentary.html



Thanks and kind regards, Hartman

Thankyou Saira !

Dear Janaki

Wish you and the family and all at Twist n Tales a very happy New Year. Thank you for a lovely afternoon at Sassoon. The kids enjoyed the program as usual and so did we. Please convey a special thank you to Santa and to Sonali, Geetanjali and Riaz for the story-telling. And Santa's little reindeer for the carol singing. To Kimi for her song and the CD player, blackboard and to all who helped in yet another memorable event.

With love,
Nalini and Saira

A few online petitions that seem like just causes forwarded by friends

Petition 1

Some days ago NCP inducted a person with a criminal record into its party as someone who was considered reformed because of a good track record for the past one year. A reaction from the public forced them to withdraw his name. Read the front page article in the DNA dated Jan 14...
FACED BY MEDIA, PUBLIC CRITICISM, BODKE QUITS NCP.

WE MUST SPEAK UP!!!

Friends

Here's a sharp response to the Tata/Airtel/Reliance Telecom Chairmen's endorsement of Narendra Modi as a future PM of India. I would urge you to read and endorse the statement. While we may have objections to some aspects of the letter, the significant part is it may just work to show India Inc that they cannot take everyone's complicity for granted.

The kernel of this protest is: All those who sign this petition will switch off their Tata Indicomm, Airtel and Reliance cellular phone and broadband connections from midnight (00:00 hours) of January 30th 2009 for 24 hours to observe Gandhiji's assassination anniversary as Cellular Silence Day. This will show up as a gap in billings in the accounts of the brand owners.

A powerful gesture, spread it to all you know!


Dear Friend

The collective amnesia of the captains of Indian industry, Messrs.Tata, Mittal and Ambani embracing Narendra Modi and endorsing his candidature as future PM of India, disturbed me immensely.

This petition is my humble effort to engage the conscience of corporate India and make it known to them that the Indian citizen is not to be trifled with.Just as we can vote for or against the poitician, we can pinch the corporate bottom-line in order to engage their attention to mend their ways.

It is not an easy task for us to keep our cell phones and Blackberries switched off for an entire day on January 30th,- the 61st anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi's assassination.

However, it ought to be sufficient to get the message across to corporate India that we will not tolerate the endorsement of fascists as future Prime Ministers.

May I request you visit the link below to sign and thereafter circulate the petition below, if you feel as strongly about this matter



The petition title is: Cellular Silence Day_30th January 2009.

The petition URL is:
http://www.PetitionOnline.com/30JAN09/petition.html

The petition is directed to: India Inc.

The start date is: ..January 15th, 2009
The end date is: ..January 30th, 2009

The petition statement says:


Dear Messrs, Ratan Tata, Sunil Mittal and Anil Ambani

I am one of a billion Indian citizens.

I am somewhere in the middle of that pyramid that you wish to give voice - from bottom to top - through wealth creation.

I am proud of the brands you represent that have made India proud.

I am one of the burgeoning Indian middle-class that share your aspirations of mutating India from indolent elephant to thundering tiger.

It ends there...

I have hitherto been accused of being indifferent and apathetic, simply because I am overawed and felt overwhelmed in a system replete with Goliaths.

But when I saw you embrace the fascist mastermind of state sponsored genocide as a future Prime Minister and endorse the Modi-fication of India, it was disappointingly apparent that the brands that aspire
to make India rich shall continue to languish in ethical poverty.

While I am filled with revulsion at your endorsement of Narendra Modi, I must respect your right to do so as a fellow citizen. In writing this petition I am a mere David amongst the mightiest corporate Goliaths but I feel empowered to address your collective amnesia - through recollection of the Gujarat pogrom of 2002 by the true Goliath among Gujaratis in particular and Indians in general -

Mohandas Gandhi.

All those who sign this petition will switch off their Tata Indicomm, Airtel and Reliance cellular phone and broadband connections from midnight on January 30th 2009.

It is eminently possible that I might be the one voice in a billion who will observe the 61st death anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi on as Cellular Silence Day.

Then again, there might be close to a billion who could join me on
January 30th, 2009 expressing their solidarity and silently insisting that the captains of India Inc adopt an ethical, compassionate path to wealth creation rather than the single-minded pursuit of the bottom-line.

We shall know that by the end of 30th January, 2009.

Saturday, January 3, 2009

For Shibani


...and when she landed, she was out of breath, and everything around her was different. Strange, bittersweet and filled with joy so sharp it was almost frightening.
Dear Shibani,
Some of us tnt-ians are fiercely possesive of our bathrooms and for fear of having to share them, decide never to get married. We are so glad you found The Man who makes even this fear seem trifling.
Sending you all our love and the warmest of wishes...

Xmas @ Sassoon






Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Message sent on 24/12/2008 to the twistntales@yahoogroups.com

Hi all,

Thanks all of you for turning up for our X’mas event in Sassoon Hospital … the kids had a great time, so did we! The snaps taken will shortly be put up in www.twistntales.blogspot.com.

The year’s drawing to a close with a host of uncertainties on the National front…and the electoral scene looming large. Looks like 2009 will turn out to be landmark year! We hope and pray that you and your family and friends have a wonderful Christmas and a very safe and joyous 2009. And fill up your heart with abundance with all the lovely books that we have at twistntales!

Lots of new books, some reviewed, some listed:

New Arrivals:

"Imagining India" by Nandan Nilekani @ Rs 699/- (530 pgs)
Internationally lauded entrepreneur and co-founder of Infosys, Nandan Nilekani astutely, eloquently and accurately captures the whole gamut of India from, as he puts it, "the point of view of an avid amateur”; Examining the ideas that give India strength and the ones that inhibit it, how it’s multitudinous people arm it with great potential power, how legislative history created snarls in productivity and arguments on topics many and varied (reservations, rapid urbanization, the environment and even sustainable energy resources) it is an indelible and evocative read.

"Inside Ducker’s brain" by Jeffrey A Kames Rs @ 1025/- (274 pgs)
The inventor and quintessential guru of management Peter Drucker has penned over thirty books in a span of sixty years, each detailing a different one of his management tenets and business philosophies. "Inside Ducker’s Brain" collects the crucial essence of all his works and compiles them in one powerful and comprehensive volume. Business principles that could very well be mottos such as “opportunity favors the prepared mind”, the upholding of the Jeffersonian ideal of equality, the defining role of the leader, a short course on innovation are only some of the basic rules outlined in this chronicle that was polished by Drucker, himself!

“Understanding our Mind” by Thich Nath Hanh @ Rs 295/- (251 pgs)
”Understanding our Mind” was a finalist for the 2001 Nautilus Award and not for any small reason. The book delves into the nature of consciousness and rewards the reader with a comprehensive understanding of the subject. Thich Nath Hanh, Martin Luther King’s nominee for a Nobel Peace Prize, uses the metaphor of a careful gardening throughout this book; our mind is a field, seeds are of all kinds (joy, suffering, love, self delusion etc), flower and garbage etc. Though his teachings stem from the Buddhist school of thought their simple wisdom is all encompassing and universal. An inspirational book describing a valuable philosophy.

"Khairlanji- A strange and bitter crop" by Anand Teltumbde @ Rs 190/- (211 pgs)
"Khairlanji” is a book in the Holocaust series that, through the example of the massacre of a Dalit family at Khairlanji, captures the reality behind India’s veneer of development and progress. How has India’s modernist, republic encouraged inter-caste bitterness? Did the elitist mass media fail in its purported goal of objectivity and purposely portray the murderous mob sympathetically? A powerful treatise about the ongoing oppression and suppression of Dalits in a modern India.

"Our Bodies, Ourselves" by The Boston Women's Health Book Collective @ Rs 450/- (830 pgs)
Covering not just a woman’s bodily but psychological and emotional well being "Our Bodies, Ourselves” begins with a chapter on body image and continues to highlight various, crucial areas of women’s health; chapters on sexuality, sexual orientation, gender identity, pregnancy, eating well, mood altering drugs, abuse, relationships etc it covers the whole gamut of women’s issues with a bent towards South Asian women, providing not only a comprehensive guide but the tools for self help and resources for further reading as well.

"The Private Patient" by P. D. James @ Rs.695/- (395 pgs)
Here’s another Adam Dalglish mystery from the pen of P.D James (author of international bestseller “The Lighthouse”). The beautiful Dorset country comes to life as James weaves a psychologically stimulating plot around Mr. Chandler Powell’s private clinic where infamous investigative journalist Rhoda Gradwyn’s convalescence is rudely interrupted when she is murdered. James’ beloved creation Dalglish investigates when a second killing raises more complications than clues. A twisting and absorbing mystery that draws one in with its air of being so convincingly real, both in portrayal of people and places, James retains her masterful skill!

"You've been warned" by James Patterson and Howard Roughan @ Rs. 295/- (435 pgs)
Ambitious, neurotic (maybe psychotic?) Kristin Burns is a wannabe celebrity fashion photographer trying to make it big while working as a nanny for the children of a Manhattan based family and carrying on an affair with her boss’s husband. A bloody, recurring nightmare (that feels like it’s coming true), a long dead dad (isn’t he?), a loving boyfriend (doesn’t he?), receives collect calls and her paranoia starts to lead her mind astray. This collaboration between Patterson and Roughan produces a fast-paced page-turner that promises a quick, suspenseful and tumultuous read.

"Tales of Beedle the bard" by J.K. Rowling @ Rs 599/- (108 pgs)
A hopping cauldron, a foolish, power hungry king, a proud and prejudiced pure-blood wizard, princesses on a shared quest and, finally, the deathly hallows, "The tales of Beedle the Bard" is a collection of five 'fairy' tales popular among children in J.K. Rowling's wizarding world. Beedle was a progressive thinking fifteenth century Bard and this 'edition' of moral stories was translated from ancient runes by Hermionie Granger published with Albus Dumbledore's original footnotes intact. This inventive device allows Rowling to analyze and comment upon her own fables using Dumbledore's voice and wit. Typical Rowling but taking a leaf or two out of the books of Blyton and the brothers Grimm, it is an exceedingly delightful read!

"Story of Astronomy" by Uday Patil @ Rs 80/- (50 pgs)
Whacky artwork adds zing to an already fun script, though it makes no claims to covering every known aspect of astronomy. A select history of the subject is portrayed in the style of a comic book and prominent controversies steered clear of. A slim volume that promises a quick, zany and illuminating read, it has been both written and illustrated by Pune's own Uday Patil.

“The ghost of the mountains” by Sujatha Padmanabhan @ Rs 100/-
A simply told tale of a small Ladakhi village’s encounter with a feral snow leopard, and one boy’s determination to save the majestic creature from the villager’s wrath. A beautiful book, with lovely illustrations and nuggets of interesting facts about nature, a smattering of Ladakhi words gives it additional touches of warmth. Short, sweet and conveying the message of conservation, this is a one of a kind find.

New books:

"For Crying Out Loud! - The World According to Clarkson" by Jeremy Clarkson @ Rs 395/-
"Success Is Not An Accident - Change Your Choices, Change Your Life" by Tommy Newberry @ Rs 295/-
"You Only Think Twice - The Definitive Guide To Better Thinking Skills For Indian Executives" by K.Ravi @ Rs 195/-
“The Untold Charminar – Writings on Hyderabad” edited by Syeda Imam @ Rs 399/-
“The World Almanac and book of facts 2009” @ Rs. 595/- by Reader’s Digest
“Working with Earth Energies” by David Furlong @Rs. 595/-
“Rigmarole and Other Plays” by Sai Paranjpye @ Rs.199/-
“America America” by Ethan Canin @Rs. 875/-
“Breaking Dawn” by Stephanie Meyer @Rs. 550/-
“India- One man’s personal journey round the subcontinent” by Sanjeev Bhaskar @ Rs 295/-
“The Rumbling Island – True stories from the forests of India” edited by Zai Whitaker @ Rs.175/-“China: A history” by John Keay @ Rs 395/-
”The Power of Story – change your story, change your destiny in business and in life” by Jim Loehr @ Rs 685/-
“Wild City” by Ranjit Lal @ Rs 275/-
“Footprint India handbook 2009” by Annie Dare and David Stott @ Rs 875/-
“Branson” by Tom Bower @ Rs 495/-
“Destination moon” by Pallava Bagla and Subhadra Menon @ Rs 195/-
“The accidental theorist – and other dispatches from the dismal science” by Paul Krugman @ Rs. 500/-
“Outliers – The story of success” by Malcolm Gladwell @ Rs. 399/-
“The Business traveller’s guide to the World” @ Rs. 399/-
“Panic” by Michael Lewis @ Rs. 250/-
“Courting destiny” by Shanti Bhushan @ Rs. 650/-
“The Silver Donkey” by Sonya Hartnett @ Rs. 195/-
“The Cosmic Dectective – Explaining the mysteries of our universe” by Mani Bhaumik @ Rs. 199/-
“Tandoor Cinders” by Vilas Sarang @ Rs. 199/-
“The Woman who thought she was a planet and other stories” by Vandana Singh @ Rs. 275/-
“Twilight” by Azhar Abidi @ Rs. 399/-

Happy reading, enjoy your books, savour the pleasure of reading and re-reading a good book! Have a wonderful Christmas and a lovely 2009,

From all of us here at,

twistntales

Monday, December 8, 2008

Recession - so learn new habits ? why can't we do so otherwise ?

Cost Cutting & Redeployment Measures By Wipro, TCS, Infy

Wipro has asked the recruits hired for the tech services arm to join the BPO arm instead to avoid a delay in joining dates. Currently, this is being offered in Kolkata and it could be replicated in Orissa and Hyderabad as well. This will be a time bound offer that could extend between 12 to 18 months after which they will be able to join tech services again. Also, there won’t be any change in salary structure for such employees. On the other hand, Infosys has urged its employees to save $10 each by cutting operation cost and controlling expenditure. The company has also set up a portal for employees to send in cost cutting measures and suggesting bigger business ideas. Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) is planning a an austerity plan under which all capital expenditure will be re-examined.
Source: 03-12-08 www.ibnlive.com & Hindustan Times Business Compiled by www.naukri.com


This is a tragedy. When companies have to "tell" employees to save $ 10 by controlling exps. Why ? Becoz it is recession ? why not otherwise ? Because client is paying ? Now that clients are asking for 30% cuts, suddenly everybody is waking up.

Don't we need clean working habits always ? why can't we use both sides of A4s ? So much of printing stationery is wasted. So many cars - from the same organisation go from Pune to Sahar everyday. Can't we pool ?

Sometimes, you feel good about a recession ... its the only way we begin to value what we have.

At twistntales, we try to run our business with the economics of a marwari store, but at the same time give customers, the ambience of a Landmark. (we are not that big, but soon we'll get there !) Right from using re-cycled newspaper bags for our books. And when many of our customers return our bags to us, we accept them happily - to use them again.

All our telephone pads are made from one side used stationery. No Post-its in tnt, only for special occasions. We need to be this way always. Remember, we are in the books business ? We don't make too much money ?

But wasteful expenditure hurts. Anywhere and everywhere. In whichever form. Sometimes, midlle class virtues of saving every penny - and making sure each paisa goes a long way is best.

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Message sent to twistntales@yahoogroups on 3rd Dec

Hi all,

While our hearts and minds grieve for tragic events that our country is needlessly going through, our hope lies in “the thousand mutinies” (as Naipaul put it) that are happening across the Nation right now. While the TRPs go up on the Mumbai story, another 177 lives have been lost on the east coast of India due to a cyclone. We need to get more sensitive – not just when it affects people like us – and we can go a long way in making ourselves a Nation. While we seek answers, we need to do our bit as concerned citizens – we can start with making sure that our names are on the electoral rolls and go out to vote on D day.

J.K.Rowling can be credited with a lot of new desirable behaviour … getting kids back to reading, for example. And getting us to send this mail to you, after almost a 2 month gap!!! No wonder she is rich! She goads folks to action!

Yes, the “Tales of Beedle the Bard” will be available tomorrow (Thurs, 4th Dec), first thing in the morning. So, wake up early all you Rowling fans … as usual, twistntales decides to keep you awake!

And yes, thankyou for all your queries re. our welfare in these recessionary times… yes, we are doing fine, thanks again. We are using this opportunity to create some back office systems, computerize our records, stocks and inventory. We hope to be implementing our billing software shortly. All in all, we hope to bring you a better shopping experience at our Store.

Before we get on to new books, our Christmas party at Sassoon Pediatric Ward is scheduled for Sat, 20th Dec, 2 pm. For those of you who are new to this, we celebrate Christmas with Santa, Story telling, music and dance at Sassoon Hospital in the Pediatric Ward. A few volunteers like Saira Sikand and Nalini Ramachandran have been working there for many years and have created “Sunshine” for the kids. Every year twistntales carries goodies to Sunshine, sponsored by our customers. The requirement list for Sunshine will be put up at the Store in a couple of days.

Lots of new books have released in the past few weeks, few reviewed below and the others listed below!

New Arrivals:

"The parrot who wouldn't talk and other stories" by Ruskin Bond @ Rs. 125/- (106 pgs)

A fresh compilation of works by well beloved, Mussoorie-dwelling Bond, comprising fourteen short tales, both newly written and old favourites. Adventures and misadventures abound as young Ruskin, his grandmother, grandfather (constantly involved in fun-filled trickery), bumbling Uncle Ken and miscellaneous eccentric acquaintances and relatives go about their lives. Among other things they capture a ghost, have an encounter with a hungry tiger, listen to, tell and are part of many stories. Each is a small but wholesome nugget, nourishing with nostalgia, humour and charm in that style which is so inimitably Ruskin Bond.

"Same-sex love in India: A literary history" Edited by Ruth Vanita and Saleem Kidwai @ Rs. 450/- (479 pgs)

The aptly titled compilation not only chronicles homoerotic writings but in fact begins by explicating the significance of friendship in the Vedic tradition. Classified neatly into ancient/ medieval/modern Indian materials (Sanskrit and Perso-Urdu) it attempts to do away with the illusion that same sex love is a recent phenomenon in human history. It is not limited to homosexuality but explores all same sex love finally inclining toward the romantic and the sexual. Extracts from modern writers such as Ismat Chughtai, Bipen Khakhar, Vikram Seth juxtapose with stories from the Panchantantra, Kama Sutra , Bhagvad, Shiva, Padma Puranas, Amir Khusro and even the Baburnama. Varied flavours and shades of the subject are exposed for a time and given breathing room.

"AIDS sutra" by Various (Edited by Negar Akhavi with a foreword by Amartya Sen) @ Rs. 395/- (334 pgs)

Collected writings from eminent pens all exploring HIV/AIDS in some form or the other. Aspects of the disease from how it touches sex workers, how hijras in India deal with the increasing threat to how injecting drug users risk it every time they use are explored. Salman Rushdie, Kiran Desai, William Darlymple, Shobhaa De, Vikram Seth, Sunil Gangopadhyay and more contribute unique stories elucidating the suffering (mental, physical and social) the AIDS afflicted go through. Each piece casts a bit of light stilling a separate hue of the disease on paper.

"Moving out of the box" by Jana M. Kemp @ Rs. 255/- (168 pgs)

Brainstorming sessions often lead to very little action. Moving Out Of The Box details tools that will help management teams forgo futile arguing and ensure constructive thinking. This book provides methods essentially the "ChoiceMarks" way to enforce decisions. ChoiceMarks starts with AntiSurvival, Boxed-In, Neutral, Engaged Enthusiasm, and Extreme Excitement - all different stages of team decision making. A good process to follow to have result oriented meetings.

"Buy.ology: How everything we believe about why we buy is wrong" by Martin Lindstrom @ Rs. 525/- (240 pgs)

"Buy.ology" opens a new window into the consumer mind and serves us a fresh cross-section of what drives a consumer. An anti smoking law will unwittingly induce the opposite. Subliminal advertising ; banned but still everywhere. The reasons as to what advertisments appeal to us are as varied as religious beliefs, childhood memories, even our sense of smell. Prepare to have your established beliefs on consumer psychology skewered.

"The Tao of personal leadership - The ancient way to success" by Diane Dreher @ Rs. 195/- (288 pgs)
Tao, the ancient Chinese belief system accepts change and attempts to create harmony in concert with change. "The Tao of Personal Leadership" blends the ancient wisdom of Tao with recent successes in the world of leadership. With examples, questions and exercises Diane Dreher illustrates and then reinforces age old strategies to succeed in being a leader to yourself as well as challenging those surrounding you to reach their zenith.

"Belonging" by Sameem Ali @ Rs. 350/- (281 pgs)

This is the true story of Sameem Ali. Unwanted as a baby she was sent to a children's home where she grew into adolescence. When she was taken back by her family she was hurriedly married off at thirteen and quickly became a mother at fourteen. This simply recounted tale recalls Sameem Ali's struggle with abuse in both her own family and her husband's as she forges a way to a happier future.

"100 essential things you didn't know you didn't know" by John D. Barrow @ Rs. 525/- (284 pgs)

Brace yourselves for some flabbergasting mathemagic! A spectacular compilation of practical yet thoroughly fun mathematical applications shedding light on the six degrees of separation, why the other queue always seems to move faster, whether an army of randomly typing monkeys can produce the entire works of Shakespeare (yes!), how long things survive, chaos, infinity and everything in between. "100 Essential Things You Didn't Know You Didn't Know" proves undeniably that, yes! Maths is in fact very interesting!

"A girl like me" by Swati Kaushal @ Rs. 250/- (338 pgs)

An,Anisha,Ani ; This American born Indian adolescent, recently relocated from the U.S. to Gurgaon with her mum, and memories of a dear departed dad, is your typical tomboy turned bombshell but still too deep in denial to understand why the gorgeous guys are chasing her sometimes shorts clad, sometimes skirt clad derriere. Candidly chronicling her clueless confusion between Kedar, Kunal, quirky classmates, killer kisses, A Girl Like Me is choc-a-block with confessions of this confounded teen drama queen.

"The book of Ram" by Devdutt Pattanaik @ Rs. 250/- (215pgs)

In Hindu culture the love for Lord Ram is unanimous. Eka-vachani,Eka-bani,Eka-patni. He is the King who always keeps his word, the eternally devoted husband, brother, son, pupil, perfectly dutiful in every way. Through The Book Of Ram Devdutt Pattanaik examines Lord Ram and his relationships with various mythological greats; Dashratha, Valmiki, Sita, Lakshamana and more, to the end of asserting his relevance in the modern era.

"Girls of Riyadh" by Rajaa Alsanea @ Rs. 430/- (300 pgs)

The stories of four Saudi girls facing the usual trials and tribulations experiencing the very heartbreaks and heart's desires that are universal to modern young women all over the world. Told via email to a vast online audience, Girls Of Riyadh disillusions those among us who felt the cultural divide to be very great and reveals that under their Abayas - girls,even 'Girls of Riyadh' just wanna have fun!

"A director's mind" by Ujjal Chakraborty @ Rs. 995/- (351 pgs)

True to title "A Director's Mind" explores the methods and thought process of cinematic legends Chaplin, Ray, Kurosawa, Hitchcock (to name a few) Breathtakingly illustrated with stills from cinematic chef d'oeuvres it delves into the genius behind great works of cinema and literature (Graham Greene, Bertrand Russell, Leo Tolstoy, Shakespeare) grooming one in the directorial mindset.

"The partnership - A history of Goldman Sachs" by Charles D. Ellis @ Rs. 995/- (729 pgs)

Goldman and Sachs has weathered every financial crisis right from the Great Depression of the 1927 on. From creative entrepreneurial decisions to disciplined risk taking, intensive recruitment and those colourful individuals (a junior high drop out, powerhouse Gus Levy, two secretaries of the treasure to current CEO Lloyd Blankfein) who add spice to the variety, "The Partnership" lays out a comprehensive history of the firm's rise through time, cementing our admiration and understanding of how it scaled Wall Street to reach its peak.

"Ocean of wisdom - Guideline For Living" by The Dalai Lama @ Rs. 195/- (132 pgs)

Pearls of good, sound advice for all, from His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama. Everyday matters as well as threats to modern world such as impending nuclear warfare and global warming are commented upon. Exceedingly humble and peaceful yet in complete awareness of the need of the hour, each page holds a wealth of wisdom applicable to anyone even those not inclined toward religion or worship.

"Mahatma vs Gandhi" by Dinkar Joshi @ Rs. 250/- (279 pgs)

A novelization of the life of Harilal Gandhi. Eldest of four Gandhi sons, Harilal was the black sheep of this family, with the media often reporting his drunken misbehaviour at the height of Gandhiji's quest for Swaraj. The struggle between the man and the Mahatma, unveiling an unprecedented aspect of Gandhiji as a struggling family man is what "Mahatma vs Gandhi" is about.

"Chandrakanta" by Devakinandan Khatri @ Rs. 199/- (252 pgs)

About a hundred years prior to the conception of Harry Potter, the world of Hindi literature was being vividly painted with the adventures of Chandrakanta. Puffin has now unearthed this treasure and translated it into English for a new generation of readers to enjoy. The love of princess Chandrakanta and prince Virendra Singh is fraught not just with political intrigue but by obstacles of a magical nature. Mustachioed Krur Singh, vying for the affections of the princess, employs the services of spies well versed in the dark arts and masters of disguise to thwart Virendra. Labrynths, mystery, murder and plot, Puffin sees no reason that "Chandrakanta" should ever be forgot!

"ABCs of parenting" by Gouri Dange @ Rs. 175/- (123 pgs)

A guide through an A to Z of phases and techniques of parenting. Gouri Dange uses her experience as a family counsellor to lay out some fundamental concepts that will help parents understand and better communicate with their kids. For parenting there is no short cut, no ABraCaDabra...it is once again a process of starting from the A B Cs.

List of other new books

"Looking Through Glass" by Mukul Kesavan @ Rs. 325/- (378 pgs)
"The Private Patient" by P. D. James @ Rs.695/- (395 pgs)
"The Snowball" by Alice Schroeder @ Rs. 995/- (960 pgs)
"You've Been Warned" by James Patterson and Howard Roughan @ Rs. 295/- (435 pgs)
"The Heretic's Daughter" by Kathleen Kent @ Rs. 520/- (332 pgs)
"Finding Keeper's: The Monster Guide To Hiring and Holding the World's Best Employees" by Steve Pogorzelski & Jesse Harriott with Doug Hardy
"Looking Beyond" by Hugh and Colleen Gantzer @ Rs. 295 (276 pgs)
"Netherland" by Joseph O'Neill @ Rs 295 (247 pgs)
"The First Patient" by Michael Palmer @ Rs 280 (450 pgs)
"Amazing Grace" by Danielle Steele @ Rs 240 (523 pgs)
"Broken Soup" by Jenny Valentine @ Rs 195 (249 pgs)
"Fireflies in the Mist" by Qurratulain Hyder @ Rs 350 (378 pgs)
"Khairlanji- A Strange and Bitter Crop" by Anand Teltumbde @ Rs 190 (211 pgs)
"Our Bodies,Ourselves" by The Boston Women's Health Book Collective @ Rs 450 (832 pgs)
"Inside Druker's Brain" by Jeffrey A Krames Rs @ 1025 (274 pgs)
"By Royal Command" by Charlie Higson @ Rs 350 (354 pgs)
"How Toyota Became # 1" by David Magee @ Rs 499 (236 pgs)
"Sex and Power - Defining History, Shaping Societies" by Rita Banerji @ Rs 450 (415 pgs)
"Closing the Innovation Gap" by Judy Estrin @ Rs 595 (252pgs)
"Performance Leadership - The Next Practices to Motivate Your People, Align Stakeholders and Lead Your Industry" by Frank Buytendijk @ Rs 595 ( 302 pgs)
"For Crying Out Loud! - The World According to Clarkson" by Jeremy Clarkson @ Rs. 395 (288 pgs)
"Success Is Not An Accident - Change Your Choices,Change Your Life" by Tommy Newberry @ Rs 295 (230 pgs)
“You Only Think Twice - The Definitive Guide To Better Thinking Skills For Indian Executives" @ Rs 195 (185 pgs)
"Not Springtime Yet" by Priya Sarukkai Chabria @ Rs 350 (129 pgs)
"Designing dynamic organizations" by Jay Galbraith, Diane Downey and Amy Kates @ Rs 450 (286 pgs)
"Story of astronomy" by Uday Patil @ Rs 80/- (50 pgs)

New Tulika books :

"High in the sky - A Korean folktale" retold by Cathy Spagnoli @ Rs 125/-
"The Tamarind tree" by Lata Mani @ Rs 100/-
"Crocodile tears" by Sandhya Rao @ Rs 125/-

Lots of new books in our Nature/ Wildlife section :

"Tiger and other game" by Colonel A E Stewart @ Rs 450 (308 pgs)
"Tiger! The story of the Indian tiger" by Kailash Sankhala @ Rs 450 (220 pgs)
"Maneaters and memories" by J.E. Carrington Turner @ Rs 350 (190 pgs)
"Jungle trails in Northern India" by John Hewett @ Rs 495 (278 pgs)
"Maneaters and marauders" by John Taylor @ Rs 395 (200 pgs)
"Jungle by-ways in India" by E.P. Stebbing @ Rs 450 ( 306 pgs)
"Mauled by a tiger - Encounters in the Indian jungle" by Arthur W. Strachan @ Rs 495 (279 pgs)
."Ten thousand miles on elephants" by Olive Smythies @ 395 (220 pgs)

We have added all CNBC titles to our Investment section:

1."Invest the happionaire way" by Yogesh Chabria @ Rs 499 (86 pgs)
2."Invest the happionaire way" (Hindi) by Yogesh Chabria @ Rs 299 (113 pgs)
3."The A-list of B schools" - Your definitive guide to the best in management education edited by Dirgha Sampat
4."What your financial agent will tell you and why you shouldn't listen" by Deepa Venkatraghvan @ Rs 499 (218 pgs)
5."Everything you wanted to know about investing" - The encyclopedia of investment and wealth creating intelligence by Kotak and CNBC - TV18

Lots of new books! Take time off and take your pick!

From the team at,

twistntales

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Maximum city minimised by non-liberals

At the outset, i am hurt deeply. I come from Bombay, not mumbai - sorry that place i dont know.

My Bombay is that of Johnny Walker singing "yeh bombay meri jaan"

Bombay has been systematically ruined. I read Black Friday when it was released. I was not in Bombay in 1993. I had moved out 2 years before. But i wept when i read the book. The blasts affected most of us directly. A classmate and a few colleagues at work. I was then at Bank of Oman, with its office in Air India building. Almost the entire Bombay branch wiped out. I was at the Head Office in Dubai.

This was Deja vu. I don't like half baked pseudo mumbaites posing as Bombayites. Bombay was truly a liberal, extremely professional most happening place to be. "Dhanda" was its motto. I miss Bombay. It still miss it when i visit Mumbai.

Monday, December 1, 2008

twistntales - in the future ?

Books and bookstores are supposed to be dying. But despite the internet and the dire economy, new bookstores have just opened in Plano and Oak Cliff. KERA's Jerome Weeks says that the new shops are not your typical booksellers. Not in North Texas.

For one thing, Legacy Books in Plano is big. Located at Legacy Road and the Dallas North Tollway, it has 24,000 square feet, and it stocks some 110,000 book titles. That's the size of a Borders or Barnes & Noble superstore. But Legacy isn't a chain store. It's independently owned. And most independents aren't that big. Elsewhere in the country, major independents are considered some of the best bookstores around - places like Elliot Bay in Seattle or Book People in Austin. But in North Texas, Legacy is the first (therefore, only) major independent.

The store in the Shops at Legacy is the brainchild of Teri Tanner. She practically grew up in retail. She worked for both Barnes & Noble and Borders most recently as the regional director of sales for Borders.

TANNER: "I've been building this store in my head for 25 years - because you listen to a bookseller or a cashier or the cleaning crew that says, "I just wish this" or "I just wish that" - and that's what we've tried to do here."

Construction continues because although Legacy Books is open, the official grand opening is November 7. Deanne Teeter led the Legacy design team for the firm, Morrison Seifert Murphy. She points out the store's demonstration kitchen as one of Tanner's innovations.

TEETER: "She really wanted to have chefs that are signing their books, that they can actually cook. So this was a real design challenge and an opportunity for the space. There's a camera over there, and it displays over the cooking section on the TV, and it can be back there on the TV. So if you can't actually get into this space to see it, you can see it here as well.

Other highlights are a caf that serves beer and wine and a third-floor gallery that displays books on photography and architecture as if they were artworks. Speaking of artworks, sculptures and paintings are on display by area artists Tamara White, Elizabeth McDonald and Seth Schwaiger.

But what distinguishes successful independents is their book selection and customer service. With the right mix and the right diligence, an independent can become a favorite, local cultural institution like a museum or library. Meg Smith is marketing director for the American Booksellers Association.

SMITH: "What people look to an independent bookstore for is a sense of real personalization - in selling, in choices of reading material. And it really takes on the identity of the people that shop there. And very naturally, independent bookstores have been a center for a lot of community activity."

One survey has found that the top two kinds of stores that people hope will open near them are bookshops and bakeries. That's good news for Jorge Alvarez and Gilbert Barrola. They've just opened Dicho's in the Bishop Arts District (It's at the corner of Seventh and Bishop the former home of the Naughty Dog coffeeshop.) In the back of the bookstore is a caf run by Cretia's, the bakery on McKinney Avenue. At only 1300 square feet, Dicho's is cozy and smells of cookies.

Dichos is Spanish for "old sayings" and the store features both English and Spanish-language books. (Alvarez explains that the odd apostrophe, which suggests there's someone named Dicho involved with the store, came about because the word, dichos, was trademarked in California.) Alvarez started a bookstore in Pomona, California six years ago with his partner, and then opened a Dicho's in Gainesville, Texas, near the Oklahoma border, that the pair still run. They commute to Dallas.

ALVAREZ: "One of our goals is to make our store feel comfortable and home-like. In California, we were in an art colony, so we were surrounded by art galleries and culture. When we came to Bishop Arts, we felt we were at home again."

In Plano, Legacy Books aims to be a destination store, a shrine for booklovers all over Texas and beyond. Dicho's aim is much smaller. There isn't a single Borders or Barnes & Noble anywhere near Oak Cliff.

ALVAREZ: "There's no general bookstore that services the community. So we definitely found a niche where we feel that people are eager to have a bookstore."

Many people believe that bookstores are doomed because of online sellers like Amazon.com, even though Amazon sells less than 10 percent of all books. Actually, a much bigger threat is posed by big-box stores like Wal-Mart or Target, which skim off the bestsellers.

Yet if anyone understands the risks and the low-profit margin nature of bookselling, it's Tanner or Alvarez. And they remain optimistic.

TANNER: "I have to tell you, in some of the cities that I've been in with Barnes & Noble and with Borders, if you can do what they do in some of these locations, it's impossible for me to believe that we will not be successful."

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Am proud of you, Divya

Put your hands together for the winner of Promax Asia Silver Award Winner!

The Promax Asia 2008 awards were announced in Singapore yesterday and Divya has won the Silver award for her promo film for Channel V in the category of BEST IN HOUSE STATION IMAGE PROMO. This category awards those promo films that have been made for promotion of the channel as a whole as against a particular show.

Her promo film was selected and entered into the competition by her company. Each category has at least 10 entries from all over Asia, vying for the top two prizes - Gold and Silver.

You can see the entire list of winners here (her promo film is on the top of the list):
http://www.promaxasia.tv/overview.html

Monday, October 13, 2008

Bankruptcy explained

Once there was a little island country. The land of this country was
the tiny island itself. The total money in circulation was 2 dollars
as there were only two pieces of 1 dollar coins circulating around.

1) There were 3 citizens living on this island country. A owned the
land. B and C each owned 1 dollar.

2) B decided to purchase the land from A for 1 dollar. So, now A and
C own 1 dollar each while B owned a piece of land that is worth 1
dollar.

* The net asset of the country now = 3 dollars.

3) Now C thought that since there is only one piece of land in the
country, and land is non producible asset, its value must definitely
go up. So, he borrowed 1 dollar from A, and together with his own 1
dollar, he bought the land from B for 2 dollars.

*A has a loan to C of 1 dollar, so his net asset is 1 dollar.
* B sold his land and got 2 dollars, so his net asset is 2 dollars.
* C owned the piece of land worth 2 dollars but with his 1 dollar
debt to A, his net residual asset is 1 dollar.
* Thus, the net asset of the country = 4 dollars.

4) A saw that the land he once owned has risen in value. He regretted
having sold it. Luckily, he has a 1 dollar loan to C. He then
borrowed 2 dollars from B and acquired the land back from C for 3
dollars. The payment is by 2 dollars cash (which he borrowed) and
cancellation of the 1 dollar loan to C. As a result, A now owned a
piece of land that is worth 3 dollars. But since he owed B 2 dollars,
his net asset is 1 dollar.

* B loaned 2 dollars to A. So his net asset is 2 dollars.
* C now has the 2 coins. His net asset is also 2 dollars.
* The net asset of the country = 5 dollars. A bubble is building up.

(5) B saw that the value of land kept rising. He also wanted to own
the land. So he bought the land from A for 4 dollars. The payment is
by borrowing 2 dollars from C, and cancellation of his 2 dollars loan
to A.

* As a result, A has got his debt cleared and he got the 2 coins. His
net asset is 2 dollars.
* B owned a piece of land that is worth 4 dollars, but since he has a
debt of 2 dollars with C, his net Asset is 2 dollars.
* C loaned 2 dollars to B, so his net asset is 2 dollars.

* The net asset of the country = 6 dollars; even though, the country
has only one piece of land and 2 Dollars in circulation.

(6) Everybody has made money and everybody felt happy and prosperous.

(7) One day an evil wind blew, and an evil thought came to C's
mind. "Hey, what if the land price stop going up, how could B repay
my loan. There is only 2 dollars in circulation, and, I think after
all the land that B owns is worth at most only 1 dollar, and no
more."

(8) A also thought the same way.

(9) Nobody wanted to buy land anymore.

* So, in the end, A owns the 2 dollar coins, his net asset is 2
dollars.
* B owed C 2 dollars and the land he owned which he thought worth 4
dollars is now 1 dollar. So his net asset is only 1 dollar.
* C has a loan of 2 dollars to B. But it is a bad debt. Although his
net asset is still 2 dollars, his Heart is palpitating.
* The net asset of the country = 3 dollars again.

(10) So, who has stolen the 3 dollars from the country? Of course,
before the bubble burst B thought his land was worth 4 dollars.
Actually, right before the collapse, the net asset of the country was
6 dollars on paper. B's net asset is still 2 dollars, his heart is
palpitating.

(11) B had no choice but to declare bankruptcy. C as to relinquish
his 2 dollars bad debt to B, but in return he acquired the land which
is worth 1 dollar now.

* A owns the 2 coins; his net asset is 2 dollars.
* B is bankrupt; his net asset is 0 dollar. (He lost everything)
* C got no choice but end up with a land worth only 1 dollar

* the net asset of the country = 3 dollars.

End of the story; BUT …

There is however a redistribution of wealth.
A is the winner, B is the loser, C is lucky that he is spared.
A few points worth noting -

(1) when a bubble is building up, the debt of individuals to one
another in a country is also building up.
(2) This story of the island is a closed system whereby there is no
other country and hence no foreign debt. The worth of the asset can
only be calculated using the island's own currency. Hence, there is
no net loss.
(3) An over-damped system is assumed when the bubble burst, meaning
the land's value did not go down to below 1 dollar.
(4) When the bubble burst, the fellow with cash is the winner. The
fellows having the land or extending loan to others are the losers.
The asset could shrink or in worst case, they go bankrupt.
(5) If there is another citizen D either holding a dollar or another
piece of land but refrains from taking part in the game, he will
neither win nor lose. But he will see the value of his money or land
goes up and down like a see saw.
(6) When the bubble was in the growing phase, everybody made money.
(7) If you are smart and know that you are living in a growing
bubble, it is worthwhile to borrow money (like A) and take part in
the game. But you must know when you should change everything back to
cash.
(8) As in the case of land, the above phenomenon applies to stocks as
well.
(9) The actual worth of land or stocks depends largely on psychology
(or speculation) .

Thanks, Bhu.

Monday, October 6, 2008

Message sent to twistntales@yahoogroups.com on 6th Oct'08

Hi all,

Greetings of Navratri, Pooja and best wishes on the festive occasion of Dasera. As we herald the festive season, we in twistntales as usual will be celebrating our Saraswati Pooja on Dasera day (Thursday, 9th October) at 11.30 am. All of you are invited to share with us the joy of this festive occasion.

Lots of new books have been happening in the past few weeks (apart from the much awaited “Brisingr”) and we have been lagging behind in our reviews. Sorry about that and we are putting our best efforts in clearing that backlog. We have listed below lots of new titles that have been recently released. Do drop in and have a look.

Another reason to do so quickly over the next 2 week-ends, is because twistntales will be closed for a while due to some planned renovation work during Diwali. We hope to open with a slightly changed new look, with more space for books, by the 1st of Nov. So, please note that twistntales will be closed from the 21st of October to the 31st. We will re-open for business from the 1st of November. So, please do pick up your books in advance and stock up for the holiday season!

And now on to books:

New Arrivals:

Management:

“The Game- Changer: How Every Leader Can Drive Everyday Innovation” by A. G. Lafley and Ram Charan @ Rs.399/-(305 pgs)

A.G. Lafley and his leadership team have integrated innovation into everything Proctor & Gamble does - creating new customers and new markets. Through eye-opening stories, Lafley and Ram Charan show how P & G and companies such as Nokia, Lego and GE have become today’s game-changers. Through their own learning, they will help you achieve higher growth and higher margins, tap into the abundant creativity outside your business, manage risk and integrate innovation into your decision-making.

“A Sense of Urgency” by John P. Kotter @ Rs.495/-(194 pgs)

You know your organization needs to change. You may even know what the change needs to be: a new strategy, a new IT system or reorganization. But somehow, change comes too slowly, or it feels like you’re pushing a boulder up a hill.
What’s missing?
As change guru John Kotter shows in this eye-opening book, what’s missing in most organizations today is a real sense of urgency – a distinctive feeling and gut-level attitude that lead people to constantly shed low-priority activities to move faster and smarter, now.’ Raising urgency’ is the first step in his enormously successful eight-step-framework, first articulated in Leading Change. Moreover, as we transition into a world where change is continuous – not just episodic –Kotter shows how urgency must become a core, sustained capability.

“Stay Hungry, Stay Foolish” by Rashmi Bansal @ Rs. 125/- (325pgs)

The inspiring stories of 25 IIM A graduates who chose to tread a path of their own making and chose the rough road of entrepreneurship. They are diverse in age, in outlook and the industries they made a mark in. But they have one thing in common: they believed in the power of their dreams. Published by the Centre for Innovation Incubation and Entrepreneurship.

Indian Writing:

“Private Life of an Indian Prince” by Mulk Raj Anand @ Rs.395/-(389 pgs)

Maharaj Ashok Kumar of Sham Pur asserts complete independence for his small hill-station rather than join the Indian Union. A febrile romantic, who has inherited more of the vices than the virtues of his ancestors, he is encouraged by his nymphomaniac mistress Ganga Dasi, a powerful and illiterate hill-woman. To feed his mistress’s greed, he exhorts large sums of money from his starving peasantry; this is enough to provoke a revolt in Sham Pur and incur the extreme displeasure of the Indian Government in Delhi.
Anand’s most profound study of human nature, Private Life of an Indian Prince is the story of one man’s compelling love for a woman. It is at the same time a historical novel of unusual power, showing the demise of the princely states with the birth of a free India.

“You Are Here” by Meenakshi Reddy Madhavan @ Rs.199/-(255 pgs)

At twenty-five, life’s innumerable entanglements are getting to Arshi. Her blonde American stepmother is trying too hard, welcoming all guests with a traditional aarti. The gorgeous guy who has Arshi all flushed and dreamy is an Ice Prince who thaws at his own convenience. Her best friend Deeksha is getting married. And her normally unruffled, cocktail-concocting flat mate Topsy is getting testier by the day because her conservative family will never approve of the guy she wants.
A hilarious, sharply observant and surprisingly wise story about dealing with life’s quandaries while keeping your sense of humor intact…and your alcohol consumption just right. So if you’ve ever wondered where the crisis-crossing lines of your life converge, you are here! Maybe.

“The Healing” by Gita Aravamudan @ Rs.295/-(288 pgs)

The Babri Masjid falls on the day Ramanujam, patriarch and freedom fighter, is rushed to hospital after suffering a cardiac arrest. As his wife and children stand vigil by his bedside, a second demolition is about to throw their lives out of gear. Shanti Nivas, their sprawling family property is about to be transformed into modern apartments where all the members of the family will live in different homes, and possibly a different way of life.
Told from the perspective of Ramanujam’s younger daughter Bharati, this evocative novel set in Chennai maps the memories of Shanti Nivas and its residents. Delving deep into the sometimes fractious bonds that make up a family, The Healing is a meshing of stories woven into a gentle narrative.

“My Family and Other Saints” by Kirin Narayan @ Rs.295/-(339 pgs)

In 1969, Kirin Narayan’s older brother Rahoul announced that he was dropping out of school and leaving home to seek spiritual enlightenment with a guru.
Kirin’s sari-wearing American mother Didi enthusiastically embraces ashrams and gurus, adopting her son’s spiritual quest as her own. Her urban Indian father, Narayan, however, coins the term ‘urug’ – guru spelled backward – to mock these seekers.
Young Kirin, bewildered by the departure of the brother she adores, sensing her parents drifting apart, and observing waves of Westerners turning to meditation, Kirin is left to find her own answers. Vivid, sharply farcical and portraying the clash of culture in an Indian-American family with wonderful wit, this is the story of family, growing-up and finding one’s way.

Others:

“Empires of the Indus: The Story of a River” by Alice Albinia @ Rs.550/-(309 pgs) – (History)

In a land where it seldom rains, a river is as precious as gold. Water is potent: it trickles through human dreams, permeates lives, dictates agriculture, religion and warfare…

One of the largest rivers in the world, the Indus rises in the Tibetan mountains, flows west across northern India and south through Pakistan. For millennia it has been worshipped as a god; for centuries used as a tool of imperial expansion; today it is the cement of Pakistan’s fractious union.
Five thousand years ago, a string of sophisticated cities grew and traded on its banks. In the ruins of these elaborate metropolises, Sanskrit-speaking nomads explored the river, extolling its virtues in India’s most ancient text, the Rig-Veda.
Journalist, editor and audacious traveler Alice Albinia follows the river upstream and back in time, taking the reader on a voyage through two thousand miles of geography and more than five millennia of history redolent with contemporary importance.

“Freedom’s Child: Growing Up During Satyagraha” by Chandralekha Mehta @ Rs. 199/- (182 pgs) – (History)

Writing about her growing-up years, author Chandralekha Mehta, Pandit Nehru’s niece, sister to Nayantara Sahgal, gives us a peek into the momentous years of the freedom struggle. This was the age of Satyagraha, when India was awakening to new realities and inching her way towards freedom. The author, and her family, the Nehrus in Allahabad, were prominent participants in the extraordinary events of the time.
Inspiring, personal and filled with intimate stories of birthdays, family vacations, picketing, wearing khadi for weddings and much more, Freedom’s Child is an evocative portrait of the dynamic years of the freedom struggle, suitable for all ages.

“Mike’s Election Guide 2008” by Michael Moore @ Rs.250/-(155 pgs)

Democracy. It’s easily the best system in the world, ever. Which is why so many countries are desperate to have it enforced on them by soldiers!

Michael Moore is back to give you the low-down on the ins and outs of free elections, such as:
Why should I vote? It only encourages them!
Can my vote be bought? (And what’s the starting price?)
And the most pressing question of all – who would Jesus vote for?
If you thought voting was just a load of ballots, this is the no-hold-barred truth about democracy. Enfranchisement has never been so exciting…

“DK Eyewitness Travel: India” @ Rs. 895/- (823 pgs)

It is improbable that a travel guide could live up to its claim of ‘covering everything,’ but DK Eyewitness Travel has come rather close to it. Color coded according to area, covering everything from festivals to wildlife, hotels to trekking routes, this is a beautifully illustrated and diligently organized book. So if you are planning a weekend away, or that long-awaited family vacation, this is a guide that will direct you without taking up too much of your time.

“The Folklore of Discworld” by Terry Pratchett & Jaqueline Simpson @ Rs.905/-(372 pgs)

A child once asked, ‘Why does the Turtle swim?’
A wise man replied, ‘Child, there is no Why. IT…IS…SO.’
And that could be said of many things.

Legends, myths, fairy tales: our world is made up of the stories we told ourselves about where we came from and we got there. It is the same on Discworld, except that some beings which are imaginary on Earth, such as vampires, trolls, witches and possibly, gods – are real, alive and in some cases kicking on the Disc.
In The Folklore of Discworld Terry Pratchett teams up with leading British folklorist Jaqueline Simpson to take an irreverent yet illuminating look at the living myths and folklore that are reflected, celebrated and affectionately libeled in the uniquely imaginative universe of Discworld.

Other new books :

“Attila the Hun: Barbarian Terror and the Fall of the Roman Empire” by Christopher Kelly @ Rs.540/-(230 pgs)
“Kkrishna’s Konfessions” by Smita Jain @ Rs.250/-(369 pgs)
“Femme Fatale: Love, lies and the Unknown Life of Mata Hari” by Pat Shipman @ Rs.395/-(375 pgs)
“Indignation” by Philip Roth @ Rs.775/-(233 pgs)
“Girls of Riyadh” by Rajaa Alsanea @ Rs.295/- (300 pgs)
“The Snake Stone” by Jason Goodwin @ Rs.295/- (308 pgs)
“Star Wars: Street of Shadows” by Michael Reaves @ Rs. 250/- (308 pgs)
“Alternative Cures” by Bill Gottlieb @ Rs. 250/- (796 pgs)
“White Man Falling” by Mike Stocks @ Rs.250/-(302 pgs)
“Silks” by Dick Francis and Felix Francis @ Rs.395/-(368 pgs)
“The Book of Craft” by Shahnaz Arni @ Rs.199/-(103 pgs)
“Outlook Traveller: New York” @ Rs.445/-(343 pgs)
“The Evil Seed” by Joanne Harris @ Rs.355/-(443 pgs)
“Tales of Wit and Wisdom: Riddles, hilarious escapades and facts for young and old alike”
“Savvy Networking: 118 Fast and Effective Tips for Business Success by Andrea R. Nierenberg @ Rs.195/-(109 pgs)
“The Chase” by Clive Cussler @ Rs.250/-(487 pgs)
“Corporitual” by Raj Bhowmick @ Rs.195/-(138 pgs)
“It’s All In Your Head: Change Your Health” by Mark Pettus, MD, FACP @ Rs.345/-(309 pgs)
“The Exile” by Navtej Sarna @ Rs.450/-(251 pgs)
“Sahibs Who Loved India” Compiled and Edited by Khushwant Singh @ Rs.325/-(191 pgs)
“The Snowball: Warren Buffett and the Business of Life” by Alice Schroeder @ Rs.995/-(838 pgs)
“Kissing the Frog; The Magic that Makes Your Money” by The Brothers Middleton @ Rs.295/-(225 pgs)
“Moving out of the Box: Tools for Team Decision Making by Jana M. Kemp @ Rs.255/-(155 pgs)
“India Express: The Future of a New Superpower” by Daniel Lak @ Rs.499/-(295 pgs)
“Traffic: Why We Drive the Way We Do (And What It Says About Us)” by Tom Vanderbilt @ Rs.395/-(286 pgs)
“The Entrepreneur’s Guide to Writing Business Plans and Proposals” by K. Dennis Chambers @ Rs.275/-(168 pgs)
“The Entrepreneur’s Guide to Managing Growth and Handling Crises” @ Rs.275/-(154 pgs)
“Hot, Flat and Crowded: Why The World Needs a Green Revolution – And How We Can Renew Our Global Future” by Thomas L. Friedman @ Rs.595/-(412 pgs)
“Chicken Soup for the Shopper’s Soul: Celebrating Bargains, Boutiques & the Perfect Pair of Shoes” @ Rs.275/-(289 pgs)
“Solving Health and Behavioral Health Problems from Birth through Preschool: A Parent’s Guide” by Roy Benaroch, M.D. @ Rs.245/-(181 pgs)
“Looking Through Glass” by Mukul Kesavan @ Rs.325/- (378 pgs)
“Diary Of A Wimpy Kid: A Novel In Cartoons” by Jeff Kinney @ Rs.195/- (217 pgs)
“Captain Cool – The M S Dhoni story” by Gulu Ezekiel @ Rs. 150, (128 pgs)
“The Bourne Sanction” by Robert Ludlum @ Rs.275/- (484 pgs)
“The Weave of my life – a Dalit woman’s memoirs” by Urmila Pawar tr. from Marathi by Maya Pandit @ Rs.375/- (348 pgs)
“Dosa” @ Rs.70/- and “Jalebi Curls” @ Rs.70/- both Tullika bilingual.
“Diary of a Wimpy Kid” – novel in cartoons by Jeff Kinney @ Rs. 195/- (217 pgs)

Happy Reading and see you at twistntales on Saraswati Puja (Thurs, 9th Oct’08) @ 11.30 am.

From the team at twistntales

Thursday, September 18, 2008

Laments of an employer !

When folks are students, their minds are free and uncluttered. They are willing to do anything, work at anything to dirty their hands to get the "experience" of it all !

What happens when they get qualified and educated ? They lose their ability to think, the fear of failure grips them hard, they get into conditioned responses and attitudes and invariably, become unemployable ! No qualification today, bar a CA or an IIM, MBA demands a rigorous grind frm the students. Any other degree is a easy route to the degree itself. If folks have made it with lesser degrees, it is because of the grind that they have put in - in their early years. Folks are increasingly unwilling to work on the grind anymore. They know it all. If at all, then they need to work in "corporate" jobs. In the meantime, they would rather be "umemployed" - small businesses, where you may end up doing a more meaningful role, are not in consideration at all ! And this is happening in "retail" - a complete sunrise industry.

Both my husband and me have been working for almost 22-25 years now, and can hardly remember "non-grind" years. If today we have a surplus both of time and money, its directly attributable to that grind. I do not see others younger do it anymore. Either they have too much money, or they rationalize things for themselves. Its sad.
This is a generation born when India has been booming for a consistent period. They do not know "want"

So, i find as i look around to employ people, that there a whole lot of folks un or underemployed, but not employable anymore.

Monday, September 15, 2008

Message sent to twistntales@yahoogroups.com on 15th Sept'08

Hi all,

We let a whole month go by without sending you a mail on our new books ….. we have been a little understaffed :( …. But lots of books have been happening nevertheless! :). And good books at that !!! :) :) :)

Again we have loving reviews of the new books – yes, Tia is back! Some of these guys never leave us! But thank god for them, else we will be struggling to bring these lovely reviews to you!

New Arrivals:

Fiction:

“The Looters” by Harold Robbins & Junius Podrug @ Rs.250/-(422 pgs)Museum curator Madison Dupre takes a wild ride in the rarefied atmosphere of the lives of the superrich when she buys an ancient mask that has a history of spawning evil and murder. Stalked by killers, betrayed by people she thought were friends, she struggles to stay alive in a growing whirlpool of intrigue as rumours rage that the mask has been looted from the Baghdad museum. Can Madeline protect her own life, prove her innocence and return the fabled death mask to the museum?

“Loose and Easy” by Tara Janzen @ Rs. 250/- (406 pgs)In Denver bookie Franklin Bleak informs art recovery private investigator Esmee Alden that her father Burt owns him over eighty thousand dollars in gambling debts that is due now “or else”. She knows what ‘or else’ means to someone as bleak as this vicious bookie is. So the story of her life repeats itself with “Easy Alex” risking everything to bail her dad out of trouble.

Indian Writing:

“The Homecoming” by Shashi Warrier @ Rs. 299/- (304 pgs)


Javed Sharif returns home to Srinagar for his father’s eighty-fourth birthday. He returns with a sense of well-being, despite troubles, the violence and the bitterly cold weather. Unexpectedly, his dreams of retiring and settling in Kashmir again are shattered by a knock on the door on the day of the birthday party and, as he watches his life unravel, his world will never be the same again. The Homecoming is the story of one family, but also of the many families in Kashmir whose lives have been destroyed by decades of violence and uncertainty. Deeply moving and disturbingly honest, this is a haunting tale that is political yet profoundly personal, and tells of the pain and suffering that is a result of the cruelty – and the ultimately the indifference – of the State.

“When Dreams Travel” by Githa Hariharan @Rs. 299/- (276 pgs)
Night Falls Again. It is a soft night, willing to nurse a wounded soul with memories, fingers, words…
The curtain rises on four figures, two men and two women. There is the sultan who wants a virgin every night; his brother who makes an enemy of darkness and tries to banish it; and there are the ambitious brides, the sisters Shahrzad and Dunyazad, aspiring to be heroines – or martyrs.
With its sharp and lively blend of past and present, its skillful reworking of the historical tradition, Gita Hariharan’s multi-voiced narrative travels in and out of its characters lives in a range of dark, poetic stories, spanning medieval to contemporary times.

“Once Upon a Time in Aparanta” by Sudeep Chakravarti @ Rs. 250/- (220 pgs)
Goa is Aparanta of old – the Land at the Horizon. The tale of Dino Dantas, protestor and self-appointed guardian of Aparanta, and his innkeeper cousin Antonio begins here, in the sleepy village of Socorro Do Mundo by the Sea, where time holds little meaning and the haze of nostalgia is as binding a force as faith in the benevolence of Our Lady of Perpetual Succour, ‘Perpet’ to familiars. In prose that is part lyrical, part brutal satire, yet always passionate, Sudeep Chakravarti evokes the essence of a paradise on the verge of losing its soul.

“A Situation in New Delhi” by Nayantara Sahgal @ Rs. 250/-(189 pgs)Shivraj is dead and with him the values with which he had governed the country for over a decade. While his successors destroy the idealistic world he had built, Shivraj’s circle of intimate friends – his sister Devi, the education minister, the vice-chancellor of Delhi University and Michael Calvert, an English writer – struggle to find order in the chaos, even as Rishad, Devi’s son, loses himself in it.
First published in 1977, Nayantara Sahgal’s writing juxtaposes personal relations with the larger canvas of corrupt politics and remains fresh and relevant even today.

Additional titles released recently after a long time.

“The Day in Shadow” by Nayatara Sahgal @Rs. 250/- (236 pgs)
“Storm in Chandigarh” by Nayantara Sahgal @Rs. 250/- (222 pgs)

“Bandicoots in the Moonlight” by Avijit Ghosh @Rs. 250/- (237 pgs)
Teenage boy Anirban Roy grows up in a small town in 70’s Bihar where his policeman father is posted to pick up information on the looming Naxalite menace. Ganesh Nagar possesses neither village simplicity nor urban slick, but observes a line of ethics that defies codification. It takes time for Anirban to learn to juggle adolescent angst and ping-pong hormones, loyal friends and part-time criminals, a bewildering succession of topsy-turvy lessons in life and lust, yet manage to keep them all afloat. Avijit Ghosh’s earthy account of boy-to-manhood in fictional Ganesh Nagar is simple, prosaic and unadorned.

“Nightmare Academy: Charlie’s Monsters” by Dean Lorey @ Rs. 295/- (330 pgs)Charlie’s imagination is so strong that when he has a nightmare, the nightmare creature gets portaled right into the room where he’s sleeping. This caused a lot of problems for Charlie, until he joins the Nightmare Academy, a school that trains children with imagination to fight the monsters from the Netherworld. Charlie is one of the most powerful people at the academy, and he still doesn’t fit in – but he gains a few good friends and starts his training. He ends up having to fight powerful monsters, work to save his family, and deal with bullies. Through this, Charlie finds that he can use his imagination and self-doubt for good – and he can find his own place to fit in, after all. Don’t let the cover fool you – this is a funny, light-hearted fantasy.

Inspiration/ Healing :

“What I Talk about When I Talk about Running” by Haruki Murakami @ Rs.495/-(180 pgs)
Haruki Murakami is best-known as the author of books such as Sputnik Sweetheart, Kafka on the Shore and Blind Willow, Sleeping Woman.
What is less known is that Murakami has been a dedicated runner longer than he has been writing.
In 1982, having sold his jazz bar to devote himself to writing, Murakami began running to keep fit. Now, after dozens of races and triathlons, he reflects upon the influence the sport has had on his life and his writing.
Equal parts travelogue, training log and reminiscence, this revealing memoir covers his four-month preparation for the 2005 NYC Marathon and settings ranging from Tokyo’s Jingu Gaien gardens to the Charles River in Boston, among young women who outpace him!
Through this revelatory lens of sport emerge a slew of memories and insights: the eureka moment when he decided to become a writer, his passion for vintage records amongst others.

“Voices in the Family: A Therapist Talks about Listening, Openness and Healing” by Daniel Gottlieb @Rs. 250/- (294 pgs)Author of ‘Letters to Sam’, psychotherapist Gottlieb who is a quadriplegic dedicates this book to the human spirit in all of us. He speaks to us about how to understand the ties that form our family, the different aspects of relationships-as father, mother, sons, daughters and siblings. To each reader he explains the importance of bonding and empathy- through real life anecdotes and thought provoking examples. A book in four parts, this is advice about making peace with ourselves, our parents, children and partners in a no nonsense, amiable, adult manner.

Management:

“HRD Score Card 2500; Based on HRD Audit” by T.V. Rao @ Rs.450/-(293 pgs)
Prof. T. V. Rao is one of the early gurus of the scientific HR systems in India. Most of his earlier books have been the first literature on the relevant HR topic in the Indian context. So too, with HRD Score Card 2500.
HRD Scorecard presents for the first time a systematic and scientific way of measuring the maturity level of HR, its systems and strategies, competencies, culture and values, and business impact through a score card.
This book provides a set of easily usable guidelines for converting HR Audit findings into measurable scores and helps provide timely information for interventions as necessary. This is a useful guide for CEO’s and HR managers to evaluate and improve their human resources.

“The Peter Principle: Why Things Always Go Wrong” by Dr. Laurence J. Peter and Raymond Hull @Rs.275/- (179 pgs)‘In a hierarchy, every employee tends to rise to his own level of incompetence.’
This dangerously simple maxim of organizational dysfunction, first spelled out more than 33 years ago, has wormed itself into everyday managerial vocabulary. The Peter Principle is rife wherever hierarchies exist –and is required reading for all those now setting their feet on the first rung of the promotional ladder. Do they really want to scale a peak from which their fate can only be a dismal shunting into oblivion?
A classic masterpiece of management humor, aptly illustrated with wickedly barbed cartoons.

Socio Eco Pol / Current Affairs/ History:

“The Way of the World: A Story of Truth and Hope in an Age of Extremism” by Ron Suskind @Rs. 625/- (415 pgs)
In a sweeping, propulsive and multilayered narrative, The Way of the World investigates how the West relinquished the moral leadership it now desperately needs to fight the real threat of our era: a nuclear weapon in the hands of terrorists. Suskind shows where the most neglected dangers lie in the story of ‘The Armageddon Test’ – a desperate gamble to send undercover teams into the world’s nuclear black market to frustrate the efforts of terrorists trying to procure weapons-grade uranium. Finally, he reveals the explosive falsehood underlying the Iraq War and the Blair-Bush coalition.
Simultaneously following an ensemble of characters around the world, including a striving 24-year-old Pakistani émigré́, a fearless UN refugee commissioner, and Benazir Bhutto, who discovers days before her death, how she’s been abandoned by the US, The Way of the World is a test of Western values at a time of peril.

“187 Lives: A Remembrance” by The Indian Express Team @ Rs.395/-(225 pgs)A week after the Mumbai train blasts on July 11, 2006, in which 187 people dies, The Indian Express began a series documenting each of the lives lost, their dreams, their doubts, their hopes and struggles. This volume seeks to consolidate their memory in the form of a book.
Equally, this book is a tribute to the indefatigable spirit of Mumbai and its citizens who worked tirelessly through the night to help the wounded, the stranded and the missing, but for whom it was business as usual the next morning, as sixteen hours later, the Mumbai Locals rolled out again and a grieving city went about its business. In addition, 187 Lives looks at the major leads that helped resolve this case and zero in on the accused. Proceeds from this book will go to The Indian Express Citizen Relief Fund and will be used to aid terror victims.

“The Siege of Mecca: The Forgotten Uprising in Islam’s Holiest Shrine” by Yaroslav Trofimov @Rs.360/- (300 pgs)20 November 1979: As morning prayers began, hundreds of hardline Islamist gunmen, armed with rifles smuggled in coffins, stormed the Grand Mosque in Mecca. With thousands of terrified worshippers trapped inside, the result was a bloody siege that lasted two weeks, caused hundreds of deaths, prompted an international diplomatic crisis and unleashed forces that would eventually lead to the rise of al Qauda.
Journalist Yaraslov Trofimov takes us day-by-day through one of the most momentous – and heavily censored – events in recent history, interviewing many direct participants in the siege and drawing on secret documents to reveal the truth about the first operation of modern global jihad.

Personalities/ Memoirs :

“The Mighty and the Almighty: Reflections on Power. God and World Affairs” by Madeline Albright @ Rs.360/-(300 pgs)
From the bestselling author of Madame Secretary comes a provocative look at the role of religion in world affairs, through the lens of history and of her own personal experiences in office. Does America, as Geroge W. bush has proclaimed, have a special mission derived from God, to bring liberty and democracy to the world? How much influence does the Christian right have over US foreign policy?
Madeline Albright offers a sharp critique of US policy, condemnation for those who exploit religious fervour for violent ends and praise for political, cultural and spiritual leaders who seek to harness the values of faith to bring people together.

“Hugo! The Hugo Chávez Story” by Bart Jones @ Rs.520/-(483 pgs)In December 2006, when Hugo Chávez declared at the UN that ‘the devil came here yesterday…the President of the United States,’ it was clear that one man was taking the most powerful nation on Earth head-on.
The ruling elites in Venezuela and the United States are keen to paint Chávez as the heir to Castro. From Jones’s account however, he emerges as far more complex; a master politician and an inspired improviser, a Bolivarian nationalist and an unashamed socialist.
Jones tells the story of Chávez’s impoverished childhood his military career and the election campaign against a former Miss Universe that finally won him the Presidency.
Dramatic and superbly described, Hugo! brings to life a charismatic leader whose stories extend ‘from mud hut to perpetual revolution.’

“An Outsider in Politics” by Krishna Bose @ Rs.599/-(256 pgs)Writer, educationist and three-time Lok Sabha MP from Kolkata, Kirshna Bose gives a compelling account from the time she was a schoolgirl witnessing some of the tragic scenes that accompanied Partition to her stint as chairperson of the parliamentary standing committee on external affairs.
Married into the family of Subhas Chandra Bose, Bose’s acute yet sympathetic observations combine to form an elegantly written intimate history as well as a gripping political memoir.

Travel:

“Higher than the Eagle Soars: A Path to Everest” by Stephen Venables @ Rs.495/-(353 pgs)

High, wild places have dominated Stephen Venables’ life and now he has written a full autobiography which explores how and – more importantly – why he became a mountaineer. Venables reveals a series of never-recorded adventures on four continents. At its climax he revisits his dramatic success without oxygen on the Kangshung Face of Everest, described by Reinhold Messner as the most adventurous in Everest’s history. As Venables writes: ‘Although we didn’t go seeking deliberately an epic near-death experience, it did turn out that way – the ultimate endurance test for which all the previous adventures seemed, retrospectively, to be a preparation.’

“Outlook Traveller: 45 Weekend Breaks from Hyderabad” @Rs.295/- (415 pgs)Sail on the Vasishta Godavari in Konaseema, search for the nine Narasimhas in Ahobilam and sample the chepala pulusu of Warangai. Soak your feet in the soothing waters of the Kailashnathakona falls and explore the former capitals of ancient kings that lie in the shadow of Hyderabad.
This book tells you how…and much more.

Others:

“Sarama and her Children: The Dog in Indian Myth” by Bibek Debroy @ Rs. 350/- (243 pgs)

The written proof of an economist and research professor’s love for both-Indology and dogs, this book is a one-of –a- kind narrative of the attitude towards the dog in Indian myth and history. Tracing the Indian attitude towards the dog in a chronological manner with pre-Vedic Indus valley civilization, he incorporates 29 ancient as well as modern short stories to prove his point! He traces how although initially dogs were treated with ‘respect’, their tribe soon had to bear negative connotations by the time of the Mahabharata, only to regain their lost dignity in later times through the Jataka and Hitopadesha tales, as well as the doctrines associated with Shiva. In a light hearted manner, the author ensures that the Indian dog finally has its day!

Other new books at the Store:
DK Eyewitness Travel: India @Rs. 895/- (823 pgs)
The Game- Changer: How Every Leader Can Drive Everyday Innovation by A. G. Lafley and Ram Charan
Mike’s Election Guide 2008 by Michael Moore @ Rs.250/-(155 pgs)
You Are Here by Meenakshi Reddy Madhavan @ Rs.199/-(255 pgs)
A Sense of Urgency by John P. Kotter @ Rs.495/-(194 pgs)
Empires of the Indus: The Story of a River by Alice Albinia @ Rs.550/-(309 pgs)
Silks by Dick Francis and Felix Francis @ Rs.395/-(368 pgs)
Outlook Traveller: New York @ Rs.445/-(343 pgs)
The Evil Seed by Joanne Harris @ Rs.355/-(443 pgs)
The Folklore of Discworld by Terry Pratchett & Jaqueline Simpson @ Rs.905/-(372 pgs)
Attila the Hun: Barbarian Terror and the Fall of the Roman Empire by Christopher Kelly @ Rs.540/-(230 pgs)
Freedom’s Child: Growing Up During Satyagraha by Chandralekha Mehta @Rs. 199/- (182 pgs)
Girls of Riyadh by Rajaa Alsanea @Rs. 295/- (300 pgs)
The Snake Stone by Jason Goodwin @Rs. 295/- (308 pgs)
Star Wars: Street of Shadows by Michael Reaves @Rs. 250/- (308 pgs)
Alternative Cures by Bill Gottlieb @Rs. 250/- (796 pgs)
White Man Falling by Mike Stocks @ Rs.250/-(302 pgs)
The Healing by Gita Aravamudan @ Rs.295/-(288 pgs)
My Family and Other Saints by Kirin Narayan @ Rs.295/-(339 pgs)
Private Life of an Indian Prince by Mulk Raj Anand @ Rs.395/-(389 pgs)
Tales of Wit and Wisdom: Riddles, hilarious escapades and facts for young and old alike

Enjoy your books and HappyReading,

From the team at,

twistntales