- maraLi maNNige (Kannada - ಮರಳಿ ಮಣ್ಣಿಗೆ): The only Kannada book I read this year, largely because I am away from home, is a classic novel by Shivaram Karanth. An excellent novel with very strong characters. Add to that an easy flowing realistic narration.
- The Selfish Gene: I cannot have much new to say about Richard Dawkins' classic. Except perhaps that I did not find either the style or the substance to be as radical or confrontational as it is often made out to be. (Possibly because I read it years/decades too late.) And I mean this as a good thing: Dawkins explains carefully and in full detail, every premise and every hypothesis; there is hardly any room for a (logical) contrarian view.
- My Name is Red: A novel that deals with politics; history; conflicts of east and west; religious fanatism; love; and above all, art! Set in the 16th century Ottoman Istanbul, the novel contemplates, at its own pace, all these and more, through multiple narrators. You can find a review at The Middle Stage.
- The Music of Primes: A very interesting book by Marcus du Sautoy for a general audience about number theory with focus on prime numbers. It offers biographical sketches of some of the greatest mathematicians and their work toward revealing the mysteries of prime numbers.
- Prime Obsession: John Derbyshire's book is a more focussed approach toward explaining the Reimann Hypothesis. The book develops most of the background mathematics needed to undestand the Reimann Hypothesis before presenting the hypothesis itself. A very good book. I rate it better than The Music of Primes.
- Istanbul: Memories of a City: Orhan Pamuk's memoir on his city. It gave me a very useful word 'huzun', Turkish for melancholy. I feel it is not just Istanbul that is in a constant state of huzun. The book is an interesting read by and large, but at times the prose becomes lengthy and tedious.
- The Evolution of Cooperation: Very informative book about game theory with focus on cooperation. I have talked a bit on about this in another post - The Big Why Question. Highly recommended for anyone interested in societies, networks and India in general.
- Snow: The year 2008 is a Pamuk year for me. This is an exceptional novel. I rate it higher than My Name is Red (which is not an easy thing to do). As always, Pamuk's canvas is big. The motifs are similar: east and west; religion; poetry; politics; et al. A meditative novel, yet one that comes across more as a dark comedy. (I had written a review (in Kannada) here.)
- No Longer at Ease: Disappointing, given that Chinua Achebe is a favourite writer of mine. I have written about it in the post - No Longer at Ease.
- If on a winter's night a traveler: I don't think I am capable of saying much meaningful about this novel by Italo Calvino. If anything, I can say that it's not a novel but a meta-novel: a novel about novels; and about the nature of reading and writing. I am not even sure whether or how much I like it. A difficult read but enchanting at many places. I haven't been able complete it, not sure if I will be able to.
That's more or less it, though I did want to read more. I attempted to read The Fifth Discipline, but could not go beyond the first couple of chapters. I wish to read more this year (by cutting down on watching movies), and want to read more non-fiction. Especially books that are close to my (research) interests. So, I ask my readers to recommend me some books. Here are some impromptu tags based on the combinations of which you may want to recommend: game theory, rationality, society, India, computer science, research lifestyle, mathematics, uncertainty, graphs, complex networks, nature inspired solutions, optimization, multi-agent systems. Or anything else that you think is interesting. If you want to recommend a good fiction, that is welcome as well.
1 comment:
'The Kite Runner' 'Veronika Decides to Die' are my recent favourites. Would like to recommend you :)
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