| Related News |
India Becoming: A Journey through a Changing Landscape
Saturday, April 27, 2013
Book Review by Santanu Ganguly, New Delhi: India has changed dramatically in recent years, but what does all this change mean for he lives of ordinary Indians? In this gripping and often moving book, Akash Kapur follows a handful of men and women as they confront the ups and downs of life in modern India.
|
Expedition Naga: Diaries from the Hills in Northeast India 1921-1937, 2002-2006
Saturday, April 27, 2013
Book Review by Santanu Ganguly, New Delhi: Expedition Naga is an exciting multi-sensory trip into one of the world’s most remote and least accessible regions – the interiors of Nagaland in northeast India near the border of Myanmar.
|
BOOK BLURB-Shoes of the Dead by Neelima Kota
Saturday, April 27, 2013
Book review by Santanu Ganguly, New Delhi: ‘None of us can match the powers we challenge.
|
Book Review: Upworldly Mobile
Saturday, April 27, 2013
Book Review by Santanu Ganguly: Upworldly Mobile is the second book by Indian author Ranjini Manian published by Penguin Books India in September 2011.
|
Book Review: Sethji
Saturday, April 27, 2013
Book Review by Santanu Ganguly: New Delhi: Sethji is the head of the ABSP, a crucial coalition partner in the government.
|
|
|

|
|
Author: Shobhaa De Publisher: Penguin / Hay House, Price: Rs. 350/-, pp-217, PB, Self Help Book Review by Santanu Ganguly From India's most widely read writer You've got nothing left to prove ... remember, life begins at 60! For most of us who have crossed the sixtieth milestone in the journey of life, there's a tendency to consider oneself as "˜over the hill', a "˜has-been', or an "˜old fogey'. But for the irrepressible and exuberant Shobhaa Dé, that's certainly not the case "" life only begins at sixty! Declaring sixty the new forty, she comes up with a potent elixir to rejuvenate life, and provides practical tips on how to cope with the physical and emotional downslides commonly experienced by the post-sixty generation. Whether it's the flagging levels of confidence or diminishing stamina, Shobhaa provides the perfect antidote. She lays great emphasis on family values and ties, and underlines the importance of a spiritual quest "" all of which make each passing decade more meaningful and enriching. Drawing up a "˜road map', which enables the reader to chalk out a future course, Shobhaa shows us how life is so very beautiful and just how much we have to look forward to! |