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Tuesday

Viola


It was a beautiful morning 
And the sun shone because it had to.
Intervals played with motions,
Harmonic as a viola
Sharp as a harp.

Today shadows played with her music stand
Viola clefs turned to a stretched version of their deceiting curves...
Out went a music full of semibreves,
Lonely, longing and lustful.

Fingers moved,
But homecoming was far from the syllabi
And my voice calling her was out of apathy.
Apathy or sympathy?
Footnotes on a musical returning with its taste.

It was a beautiful night
And the moon shone because it was supposed to.
Tonight intervals listened to motions
Harmonic as a listener
Sharp as a whisperer.



Thursday

Finding Literature through Poems


When my book shelf broke into a speech one morning, I discovered I am a writer finding my space. My neck being held high up against the wall, the bookshelf spoke of imprisonment and infinite freedom and my faces moved with its whiplash, injuring my cheekbones. We all are reading something, be it poems or a prose, trying to understand what they connote, and of course living Literature by writing poems. When I try to look towards uniqueness it is always through stanzas which deal with a fair sense of strangeness providing an eerie feeling. Last year it was a sort of survey I dropped on my shoulders to go through poetry collections in the Kolkata pustakmela. Priorities were language which included incongruity and verses and that would resonate.

I found myself in a fuss when I entered stores. I couldn’t really make up my mind, what shall I read? What shall I buy? Whom shall I read? And then I entered the next store…



I must mention Kolkata has variety. The first few books I went through were Donne’s. I never knew much about writers and while just reading a short piece of his, I googled. What happened was I couldn’t move any further and the survey was called off immediately. John Donne’s metaphysical poetries were on topics like joys of lovemaking and humanities subservience to God. His energetic and rigorous uneven lines were characterized by complex witty vanity along with contrasts. The lines which reverberated were:

Now thou has loved me one whole day,
Tomorrow when you leav’st what wilt thou say?

Donne’s poem Woman’s Constancy is a quite dramatic monologue. It is full of questions and arguments and the basic meaning is quite clear from the very first lines. The wit of the poem did make it sometimes humorous. His poems made me question lyrics and he played a major role in modern development of notes. I realized when I searched, Donne’s poetry was written some four hundred years ago, inspiring not only Amit of Tagore’s The Last Poem but thousand others. A variety of amorous experiences could be related by me, though they were startlingly contradictory sometimes.


It is not my work to critically write anything on him. I don’t know him even a unit. What made me stop by him was the name A Valediction. Studying John Donne is a future decision but as of now questions after answers keeps on arising. Language was the finest discovery and amalgamation done, but poems? What are these? Just mere verses?

And then the one image of two people, that soul cannot be divided but only expanded and the triumph of love makes me wonder is this possible only through poems? Literature indeed can be only found through poems? Or as if I say for God’s sake just hold your tongue and let me love!


Friday

We are great Writers


We all are great writers
We write stories of genres
Everyday writers sleep on a cushion of thoughts
And a pillow of love between their legs
Sleeping in gymnastic positions
One hand on their chest
While the other writing a little short poem.



We claim to be writers
Writing short stories and novels
Turning truths to lies 
And lies to vulnerable lies. 
Not all poets are writers
But among the crowd we are of the same sex
We are poets and writers of course but unique in nature.


We are great story-makers and story-tellers
Prepared to invade pages with inks full of dishonest honesty and irresponsible words
Fifty percent is resplendent creativity 
While the rest is an insincere sight of words.
We are great artists too 
Quitting pages, linking words, memorizing figures 
And letting them down the pipe of the bin.


Oh eve, listen we are great writers of our time,
Indeed indecent and independent.
We are making nature, creating characters.
Writers lose weight
Writers gain weight.
Untimely death gets designed on our troubles
Yes we are writers and each a great muggle.

Sunday

In the Mid Autumn


In the mid autumn of your life,
When your father opened the door 
After seeing you I gave up my poems, my dearest 
And then Time wasted it's vulgarity on me.




In the mid autumn of your life  
When your mother closed the door 
After seeing you I gave up my love, my dearest  
And then Time overlooked me.

Thursday

I had a Collection of Songs


I had a collection of songs 
Oleander smelled rose then.
Songs from different lovers
Infinite illustrating illusions,
From people who taught how to be selfishly selfless,
To stay under the shade of eyelids
To whirl away from a glaring bulb.


I have different songs,
The first one was from him, the next one from that boy,
Each spoke of varying forms of love,
Yielding yearns for years.
Light the bulb, touch the filament
Break the bulb, light it now.
O love, can it be so different?



Songs I dreamt of, were present before I could even understand,
I cherish memories of this song list.
Unless the tides keep breaking
I will keep fostering the songs
Past and perfect perfectly blended
Chaste as hindrance
Then the last song was from him, I recollected it just now.


Friday

Ajay K. Pandey gets published by Srishti.

Blurb:

This is a true inspiring story of a man who struggled in almost every part of  his life, but when his life seemed to be falling in place, his beloved wife left him halfway and her last word, ‘You are the best husband' gave him the strength to live with. He decided to pull off all her unaccomplished duties and made it a target to thrive for the rest of  his life.

  ‘You Are the Best Wife' is the author’s story—a story of how he lost his wife, his nerve-wracking and unimaginably terrifying journey through denial, resentment, and depression to, finally, acceptance and forgiveness.



Author:

Ajay K Pandey grew up in the modest NTPC township of Rihand Nagar with big dreams. He studied Engineering in Electronics at the IERT (Allahabad) and MBA at IIMM (Pune) before taking up a job in corporate firm. He is currently working with Cognizant, Pune. He grew up with a dream of becoming a teacher, but destiny landed him in the IT field.

Travelling, trekking and reading novels are his hobbies. Travelling to different places has taught him about different cultures and people, and makes him wonder how despite all the differences, there is a bond that unites them. Trekking always inspires him to deal with challenges like a sport. Reading is perhaps what makes him feel alive.

You are the Best Wife is his debut book based on his life events and lessons.


Review:

When I looked at the book jacket it had a beautiful design. This will the first thing which will attract readers towards this book irrespective of the notion, 'we shouldn't judge books by it's cover.' Ajay Pandey's debut book cannot be a miss out. A beautiful story. This book is a simple yet capturing story of Ajay and his wife Bhaavna.None of the lavish or extravagant stuff.  It is just a simple story but while reading the book you will realise that author has put his heart and soul in the book. You will remember the book and specially Ajay for sure, for his simplicity, for story, for his love, for the emotions he felt for his wife, for responsibilities. 
If you are in love or are in waiting for your prince/princess you will connect to the story. 
A book by a person in love - summarises the book.
In simple words it's a 3.7 star out of 5 book. The narrative style was very good. It was not as informative as was expected but a pleasurable read during leisure. 
In my words, 'Ajay has a colourful style of playing with the narration.'

Thursday

Shankar MM's debut mythology


Author: 

A fantasy enthusiast, Shankar chased his dream of writing a novel and made it a reality. A Mechanical Engineering graduate and a Power Engineer by profession, his passion towards his core field made him to give up his software job in a MNC. His fascination towards mythology and his childhood memories of fighting with a wooden sword and adventures with bow & arrows inspired him to write a novel of this genre. He is presently working on the second book of Raksha duology.



Book blurb: 

“You are neither a good warrior nor a good leader.” These words haunt him. Raksha, a young prince, decides to prove himself and seeks a path not knowing where it will lead him to. However, his destiny has other plans. On the journey, his life evolves into an epic quest filled with magic and intrigue, which he never dreamt of. Set in a fantasy land Riloriya, this water kingdom is not the same as it was five hundred years ago and its history is mystery now. What will be his part in unfolding an ancient mystery? What did he lose? What did he gain?


Review: 

The blurb speaks of innate vigorous mystery and fantasy which slowly gets unfolded in each and every single chapter. This 348 page novel is a very catchy read. Shankar had done a lot of hardwork and research behind this book. It's been a very pleasurable read for me. Raksha, the main protagonist was well described and characterised. In my opinion his character was somewhat similar to mythological characters in Mahabharata. However, there was a set of new ideas and concepts which evolved out of this novel. I liked the concept of a water kingdom which had some ecstatic description. In one word this book is "a fantastic debut of the Raksha duology..."

Best lines from the novel: 
"You need to bear the pain if you want to attain supremacy."

"Holy God! Legends are true!"

Dream house publishers have given us a very nice mythology which can't be missed at any cost.