Protected by Copyscape DMCA Takedown Notice Violation Search

Tuesday, May 21, 2019

Elections 2019 and Women Candidates

This election season has been particularly nasty to women candidates, across party lines. While men got away with being targetted for their ideologies, hate-speech, language, money and caste, all women candidates, were targetted for standing up, standing for, standing against and standing with men.

Friday, May 17, 2019

How to troll Right, or not?

The Right trolls tell you to "Go to Pakistan", if you publicly support Muslims. Why not "Go to Turkey" or "Go to Indonesia" or "Fly off to Kuala Lumpur" or "Get the hell outta here and go to the Maldives"? I'd love you to send me some tickets as well.

#HowWeDontHate

The Road to Vikas: BJP 2019

The BJP is unhappy that BJP people are making a hero out of Nathuram Godse, claiming that it's not the BJP's ideology. Gandhi was assasinated in 1948. Through this election season, the BJP has taken me through the histories of the Vedas, the Cholas, the Mughals, the British-educated Indian lawyer who became India's first PM aka Pandit Nehru, Vidyasagar, Indira and Rajiv Gandhi, and now Gandhi and Godse. That's nearly five years of history classes in a school in India (grades V-X). Seems like the road to vikas (progress) is a journey to the past.

#BJP2019 #NoVikasOnlyBakwas

Friday, May 10, 2019

Book review: How to Get Published in India by Meghna Pant

Book: How to Get Published in India – Your go-to guide to write, publish and sell your book with tips and insights from industry experts
Author: Meghna Pant
Publisher: Bloomsbury
Pages: 296
Price: Rs 499

Everyone's writing a book these days. It's easy. You've got tons of information on the internet, from where you can gather many seeds of ideas. You sow them, wet them and watch them germinate into a story or two. You water, weed and prune, till you're satisfied with their growth.You hope the havest will bring in a windfall that'll take you through a decade of writing, comfortably. That's the dream that propels many to write. And it comes true for one in a million.

If you're in the million that did not get published and still want to write, Meghna Pant's book, How to Get Published in India, is one you should be reading. Writers seldom write about other writers, much less about people who are into publishing, especially in India. If you just flip through the pages of Pant's book, you'll come across some questions that arise in every writer's mind: What is your genre? How to write a synopsis? Do you need an agent? What to expect in a publishing contract? How to self-publish? How to use social media? How bestselling authors sell? Do writers make money? How to market your book? How to make your book into a TV series? How to handle rejection? Why good books are rejected? How to publish abroad? There are answers, guidelines, trade statistics, opinions from people in the publishing industry and tips from writers who've made it big – Jeffrey Archer, Twinkle Khanna, Ashwin Sanghi, Arundhati Subramanian, Shobhaa De, Meena Kandaswamy, Anand Neelakantan, Durjoy Dutta, Ravi Subramanian, Rashmi Bansal and many others.

Pant takes you through the process of writing and publishing. If you think you know how publishing works in India, well, you may be surprised after reading this one. This is Pant's fifth book and she demonstrates her flair as researcher and writer. However, you would wish she quote the sources for some of her data, for examples, “In a country where less than 2% of books find their way to a bookstore...” and “In India, e-books comprise less than a percentage of the Rs 10,000 crore book publishing industry,” and some of the essays contributed by the authors were proof-read before printing. Ravi Subramanian's essay, for example, has five grammatical and spelling mistakes in the first three paragraphs. 


Self-help books can be read many ways. You could start from the first page and go right till the end or you open up a chapter that appeals to you first, read it and put it away, till the next time you'd want to read something from the book. If you like books, are in the media and communications industry or want to get into publishing, do read How to Get Published in India.

Tuesday, May 7, 2019

How We Hate: Speech-making in Election Year

The words this election season are 'foreigner' and 'foreign' across party lines. There are people who:
1. Dislike a foreigner for marrying a man who became an Indian PM
2. Dislike that the current PM takes too many foreign trips
3. Dislike candidates who have foreign university degrees
4. Dislike people who speak English like foreigners
5. Believe Muslim-Indians are foreigners
6. Believe beef-eating is a 'foreign' thing
7. Want foreigners to invest in India
8. Don't like candidates who have foreigner girlfriends
9. Want to make in India but give contracts to foreign manufacturers
10. Hate foreigners but want to go on a foreign trip

#Elections2019 #HowWeHate #ElectionSpeeches