• Blog Topics
    • Spirituality: Journey within
    • Book reviews: Constructive Criticism
    • My Pencil-sketches
    • Mahabharata nuggets
    • Books & I – eternal love affair
    • Author tips
    • I wonder, I pontificate, I wish
    • Social Causes
    • Blogging ‘Eureka’ tips & ideas
    • Blog Milestones
    • Haiku
  • My novel – Arjun: Without A Doubt
    • Download Free Excerpt (pdf)
    • Arjun : Journey of my Novel
    • Book reviews for Arjun: Without a Doubt
    • Quotes from Arjun:Without a Doubt
    • Arjun Anecdotes
    • Arjun – Anecdotes, free excerpt, quotes, reviews, journey memories
      • About Author
  • My novel: Rage of Maggots

Impractical Dreamer: Sweety Shinde

~ Doctor. Author. Mahabharata fanatic. Yoga enthusiast. Sanskrit learner. Chiku's (my doggie) adopted hooman. Love to unfurl with pencil sketching, Kishore Kumar & black coffee laced with Hazelnut syrup. Curious about the Mystique.

Impractical Dreamer: Sweety Shinde

Category Archives: Biography/Autobiography

book review- the old man on the beach & …

05 Monday Jun 2023

Posted by dr sweetyshinde in Biography/Autobiography

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

book review

My take – 22 short stories with a strong autobiographical leaning. Tales are relatable, touching and thought provoking. Writing style is fresh and original. Characters are well etched and remain in memory even after the page has turned. Tears, smiles, chills, thrills, pining, yearning – get a dose of what appeals to you.

Author: D.K Powell

Here’s how the author himself describes his work – ‘

“Twenty-two short fiction stories and semi-fictional essays which individually stand alone but together takes the reader on an imaginary journey from childhood in 1980s Britain to adulthood as a teacher, to life in Bangladesh and finally to old age (and beyond) in contemporary Britain.

Separate characters, narrators and scenarios present different fictional ideas yet hidden within each is a kernel of truth, deliberately masked, about the author behind them all. Here we meet schoolboys hiding from witches, terrified teachers, dangerous school Heads, magical instruments, mysterious prisons and (extra)ordinary women – yet everything has some basis in reality. The stories explore difficult themes such as childhood innocence, abuse, sex, love, religion and death.

Some stories and essays connect together to form a chronological thread while others contradict each other or imagine alternative lives. All of them are intended to amuse or challenge the reader’s understanding of life and, if they take the time to look closely, to reveal pencil marks hidden behind the paint.”

Pages – 244

Don’t miss this roller coaster ride.

Book review – Many Lives, Many Masters by Brian Weiss

21 Saturday May 2016

Posted by dr sweetyshinde in Biography/Autobiography, Constructive Criticism: Book reviews

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

Bhagavad Gita, book review, hypnotherapy, immortal soul, near death, past lives, reincarnation, sankhya yoga, spirituality

Twitter review – With great expectations comes great disappointment.

First things first – the book is already a blockbuster seller. That relieves me from the sin of jeopardizing a newbie author. It also means the author can pull a Rhett Butler snarl upon my opinions.

So why am I reviewing it? B’cos a blog post is long overdue in my schedule 🙂

Premise– A blonde laboratory technician cum swimwear model Catherine (ahem!) is depressed. She is plagued by childhood demons, ongoing nightmares and an abusive married boyfriend. She turns up for hypnotherapy at Dr Weiss’s clinic and discovers a chain of prior births.

Catherine taps into 86 prior births in lurid detail, speaks foreign languages fluently for brief spans, finds past relatives reborn as current colleagues and generally re-falls in love with life instead of nitpicking over its brief grief.

Reincarnation-process

The novelty of the first 20 pages wanes rapidly as the process gets repetitive. Dr Weiss demonstrates more hand clapping and chest thumping than a sombre scientific approach.

To an Indian bred on the ‘immortal soul, mortal body‘ principle of Sankhya yoga (Bhagavad Gita), reincarnation concept is not a novelty. I was eager for the Continue reading →

Did this book kill Govind Pansare?

17 Sunday Jan 2016

Posted by dr sweetyshinde in Biography/Autobiography

≈ 24 Comments

Tags

govind pansare, Hinduism, political assassination, shivaji maharaj, swarajya

 ‘Devotees create a God out of a mortal – it absolves them of any responsibility to behave like their idol.’

– says Govind Pansare about Shivaji Maharaj, Tukaram and Dnyaneshwar.

In an eerie premonition, he second guesses their mysterious deaths too –viral fever, samadhi & flying chariot respectively used as elaborate cover-ups for their elimination.  Did he anticipate his own assassination too?

‘Shivaji Kon Hota?’ (Who was Shivaji?) is a slim (70 page) sharp analysis on Shivaji Continue reading →

Mistress to the Throne (book review): Ruchir Gupta

13 Tuesday May 2014

Posted by dr sweetyshinde in Biography/Autobiography, Constructive Criticism: Book reviews, Debutante Authors

≈ 28 Comments

Tags

aurangzeb, book, book review, jahanara, mistress, mughal, review, shah jahan, throne

‘Our Empire had an abundance of everything- except trust and loyalty.’ says Jahanara. Daughter Shah Jahan; sister to Aurangzeb; wife to none and as aptly titled, lonely Mistress to the (Cursed) Throne.

mistress of the throne Ruchir Gupta, debutant novelist, takes up the mantle of unfolding her life saga. Thankfully, he adds a family tree to clarify the baffling plethora of characters.

Steeped in debauchery & deceit; forbidden lusts & chilling cruelty. The Mughal Empire has always been a source of curiosity and wonder at their culture and their architecture.

However, there is a turbulent atmosphere within the palaces. There is deep insecurity for personal safety; burning ambitions and raging envy that lead brother to kill brother; sister to torture sister and son to imprison father!

Particularly deep chilling moments burst out, surprisingly, not from the blood-lusty men…***Spoiler alert…but from the frustrated and ill-fated women of the Empire. (Raushanhara’s lovers are boiled to death by the creator of Taj Mahal! Equally blood-curdling is the cruelty that drives Raushanhara to roast alive her younger sister’s lover!) Spoiler ends***

In spite of the female protagonist, the men get a fair deal in terms of character development, emotions and bravura. Especially noteworthy, Aurangzeb is not reduced to a sinister caricature. Instead we see his lonely childhood, under the relentless misguidance of NoorJahan. We also see his martial exploits and competent generalship; and yet see him facing constant ridicule from Shah Jahan.

If anything, it made me want to re-read the superb Marathi novel, Shahenshah by N.S Inamdar. (https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/16204056-shahenshah?from_search=true).

Note: I have not read Indu Sundareshan’s Mughal series. So no scope for comparisons there.

Verdict: Ruchir has evidently researched thoroughly and sifted through emotional depths instead of skimming the surface. Recommended, especially for Mughal era fans and History buffs.

Shyam chi Aai: Sane Guruji, Book Review

23 Wednesday Apr 2014

Posted by dr sweetyshinde in Biography/Autobiography, Books-Movies, Classics, Constructive Criticism: Book reviews, soul-soothers

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

Aai, book review, Konkan, Sane Guruji, Shyam, Swati Snacks

Pure, lucid, lilting, heart-felt.
This is sheer mother-worship spoken from a child-like innocent man. Sane Guruji, sane guruji a freedom–seeker on Gandhian principles reminisces on his childhood  in Palgad and Dapoli (modern time rural Konkan). konkan It explores the world of little Shyam and his mother Yashoda, through short but searing real-life snippets.

The protagonist, Shyam’s mother is the universal mother taking care of her children and household. Her USP is her simplicity, her profound wisdom, her fierce streak of self-esteem, her struggle to  compensate her 5 children by instilling values for what they missed out in terms of wealth.
Sample this: 1] Little Shyam steals money from a guest to buy books for his further education. When his mother learns of it, she doesn’t give elaborate lectures. Just a stunning burning truth, ‘Your first few lessons stated that stealing is a sin. If you have still not learnt those well, what makes you think you are qualified for the next level?‘. Oh btw, she does give him brownie points for owning up to his crime.

2. Shyam’s swimming classes- The timid boy tries his hardest to hide and bunk classes. His mother, though, has no intentions of mollycoddling his cowardice. She hunts him down, whacks him into submission(none of that spare-the-rod nonsense)  and makes sure he learns swimming. Her love was not meek and did not encourage meekness.

3. Her Somvati fast, a ritual requiring her to offer 108 pieces of offering to God. She does not use their abject poverty as an excuse to fail in her offering. She offers 108 colored stones and explains to an embarrassed Shyam: God loves everything he has created. He would especially appreciate her offering; would suck on these sweetmeats for years together without exhausting his supply.

Her simple rejection of untouchability as a mask for inhumanity, her caring attitude towards wounded birds, dying cows and to her personal favorite cat; her subtle lessons on brotherly love; I could just go on and on.

her life, unfortunately , spirals downward from opulence to bankruptcy, from a bungalow to a hut, from losing her children to poverty, to plague, to smallpox. What she never loses is her dignity and values.

Don’t miss this one. Every single incident is a gem. It cannot but leave you stirred to the core.
Additional stars for the detailed descriptions of rural life; the recipes for delicious ancient dishes like Pangi , Patole and Shrikhand-wadi. Note: For the connoisseurs, Pangi is available as a specialty at Swati Snack center, Tardeo, Mumbai. Enjoy!  Pangi-Patole The film based on the book also won a National Award. shyamchi_aai__eng-246x3501

← Older posts
Follow Impractical Dreamer: Sweety Shinde on WordPress.com

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 650 other subscribers
Click on book image. Discover Arjun beyond the warrior extraordinaire

Click on image below to buy ‘Rage of Maggots’

Psychological Thriller/Short stories

3 lives. 3 moods. 3 novellas. Psycho Thriller/Medical drama

Follow me on Twitter

My Tweets

Goodreads

Click for Instagram account https://www.instagram.com/sweetyshinde111/

Blog Stats

  • 70,589 hits

I belong to IndiBlogger !


IndiBlogger - The Largest Indian Blogger Community

BlogAdda

Visit blogadda.com to discover Indian blogs
  • About Author
  • Arjun – My published novel
  • Arjun : Journey of my Novel
  • Arjun Related posts
  • Biography/Autobiography
  • blog contents
  • Blog Eureka moments
  • Blog Milestones
  • Book reviews for Arjun: Without a Doubt
  • Book writing tips
  • Books-Movies
  • Classics
  • Constructive Criticism: Book reviews
  • Debutante Authors
  • Download Free Excerpt (pdf)
  • Haiku
  • Mahabharata
  • My cars- my chariots
  • My Pencil-sketches
  • My Pets
  • Mythology
  • Quotes from Arjun:Without a Doubt
  • Random Musings
  • Reblogged posts
  • short stories
  • Social Causes
  • soul-soothers
  • Spirituality
  • This month That year
  • Uncategorized
  • World of Books & I

Need a specific word?

Upcoming Events

Archives

Blog at WordPress.com.

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Impractical Dreamer: Sweety Shinde
    • Join 464 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Impractical Dreamer: Sweety Shinde
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar