Bridge of Clay, a masterpiece delivered once again

How someone can write a book to follow The Book Thief is by itself a shock to me. Marcus Zusak, however, didn’t settle with simply publishing another work. He created Bridge of Clay- a phenomenal work of art that takes the reader on infinite journeys as he stitches together his majestic tapestry of an ode to Clay Dunbar.

When he wrote The Book Thief, what struck every single reader as a stunner was the personality of the Grim Reaper. No amount of its description is going to do justice to his way of personifying Death as not only witty, but coupling that with a humorous, curious creature that you’d end up admiring over every word in the massive work. What does he do with Bridge of Clay, now? He demonstrates that he can make any regular mortal as fantastic as he made Grim Reaper in (what was once believed to be) his one masterpiece. He makes Clay Dunbar immortal through his words, through his movements, his thoughts and his silence.

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I’ve never read an author who uses silence as much as he battles with words. Bridge of Clay firstly is a quiet book. Even in the anecdotes of five feral young boys fighting fist and heels over a game of monopoly, Zusak so beautifully establishes immense maturity and a depth of wisdom painting it in the background of a dying woman in the fore.

Bridge of Clay isn’t a thriller, yet it creates cliffhangers at the end of every single chapter. Not with stupid acts of bravery that leave the protagonist hanging off his nails in incredulously idiotic situations, the creator of Leisel and Max does what he does best to leave readers haunted until they flip the pages- building immensely potent emotional cliffhangers and breaks the narration with a second timeline; much like the tool employed in his first masterpiece.

To me, Bridge of Clay was every bit a masterpiece as The Book Thief, in its own vein, in its own individual regard. To me, it was the humor from Achilles, Telemachus, Hector and Rosy, the emotion constructed carefully around distinctly unique brothers, the awkwardness in the murderer’s talks, the thought behind naming of every single chapter in the book, the poetic depiction of emotions and the world of the Dunbars and the bridges made of 100% Clay.

To me, this was an epic of a novel and I personally hope I don’t have to wait another decade for Zusak’s next marvel.

With this fantastic start to the new year, I’m hoping to finding more incredible reads in 2019.

– Swathi Chandrasekaran
Here’s me on Goodreads!

How to Be Happy- Eleanor Davis

‘How to Be Happy’ is a collection of graphic short stories that speaks about the disillusioned beliefs of happiness we glorify today with just the right amount of abstractness to take away the author’s obviously cynical stance. The book hence ironically talks about how not to be happy instead, spewing sarcasm while speaking through the voice of the society’s happy and blessed.

Aim: Being Happy
Societal Procedure: 

20181025_133228.jpgEleanor Davis in How to Be Happy. 

I put off writing this short piece long enough to let it simmer in the back of my head, because of the sheer difficulty I had in comprehending a number of these panels and pieces in the book. It is an abstract piece of graphic novel, and the first one of its genre for me. I thoroughly enjoyed a few panels, and with some I felt myself sink into depths of cynicism as to what it could possibly represent.

20181025_133235.jpg                                                        On grief in How To Be Happy.

In all, a book I would recommend for exactly three distinctive, deep pieces that I felt resonate with me and if you read this book and find yourself connecting to something else I’ll understand that the book is as abstract and captivating as intended to be by the author.

An extremely short read I’d propose best suited for a lazy reader’s bedtime story or a quick break between work. A few of these panels have the capacity to strike iron red-hot, or go completely unnoticed depending on your moodiness. Perhaps that’s what makes the book as complicatedly abstract as I found it!

If you’re intrigued, here’s a short interview with the author Eleanor Davis on the book. This is a book I’d suggest if you’re interested in venturing into an unfound genre and decrypting the possibly profound messages, but if that’s not what you’re looking for- maybe it’s best you stay wary of How to Be Happy.

– Swathi Chandrasekaran
Book lover with constrained hours for reading on the lookout for recommendations- feel free to find me here on Goodreads and share your thoughts!

 

Restart Reading- Of Books That Make You Fall in Love

I didn’t know I would fall in love that night.

Had I, I certainly wouldn’t have stumbled into bed in tattered old shorts and a disgruntled demeanor. He was shocking – he caught me off guard and he never stopped charming his way through the two hundred odd pages of P. G Wodehouse’s Psmith in the City. The wittiness of Wodehouse explodes out of every word he utters, and there’s something about the disarming intelligence and defiant charisma he struts around with that caught my attention.

“A very long, thin youth, with a solemn face and immaculate clothes, was leaning against the mantelpiece. As Mike entered, he fumbled in his top left waistcoat pocket, produced an eyeglass attached to a cord, and fixed it in his right eye. With the help of this aid to vision he inspected Mike in silence for a while, then, having flicked an invisible speck of dust from the left sleeve of his coat, he spoke. “Hello,” he said.”

And thereby hangs the tale.

I recently read Mike and Psmith, my last first read of the Psmith series and recognized the bitter-sweetness of having completed the book and having completed the last time I’d pick a Psmith book anew. It struck me strange how close connected I’d become to this character, and how the poster industry has zero resources to placate me here (if there are any good graphic designers reading this, perhaps I could interest you in a great little product for the readers like me!)

Some books give you exactly what you’re looking for – a character to fall in love with, a plot thick as blood, a world you instantly want to move to (Whose doors are open as long as you stay loyal to it), a dystopia you struggle with and later vehemently respect or live in horror of – whatever you are looking for! And the largest challenge we face here is getting your hands on such a book, or worse – picking up a book if you dropped the last one weeks, months or years ago.

Psmith, to me, was a recommendation made by a friend who I suspect had no idea of the colossal effect it would have on me. There are a few books that made me throw aside months, weeks (and on one occasion – even years) of non-reading that I struggled through, and perhaps this might help you jump out of your reading slack and find yourself a great read to kick start your reading again:

Pick up a comic book. Treat yourself this time- BUY one:

  1. V for Vendetta: Perhaps not the most conventional approach- jumping in with a comic book. I might even have invited a few arguments about the nature of reading I was talking about but if you look closely, read intently and see between the panels, this book is all you need to throw you into an avalanche of spirited reading.
  2.  Watchmen – If you’ve already seen the movie and not read the book – I am sorry for you. The book surpasses the movie in technique, vibrancy of colors and uniqueness in panels- things that the movie makes us forget even exist. If you haven’t read the book, do pick it up. It’s worth the cost and will make for the best smiley face you have in your book shelf.
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  3. Maus: This is on the more serious side, and perhaps I should think again before throwing this into the same mix, but if there’s one book that I can count on would make you read more books, it’s Maus. Designed by Art Spiegelman with the narration of his father and Holocaust survivor, this book devoured everything I knew of comic books and threw open a whole new world of books and graphic novels.

Pick up a thriller:

  1. Devotion of Suspect X: This one is easy, you’d get through it in a few hours and you’d come out of a fiction stronger and a book ahead of where you were yesterday. Isn’t that the kind of motivation you’re looking for?

Pick up a strange new world of fiction:

  1. If you’ve read Harry Potter, pick up The Song of Ice and Fire (and maybe the next book will be out before you complete the 6!). If you’ve read both, pick up Foundation Series by Asimov. If you’ve read that as well, give me a few months and I will read a new series of books and revamp this bit for you.

Or maybe the classic everyone else keeps rambling about:
 1. Animal Farm: You’re going to love this. It’s less than a hundred pages long and you can flaunt your knowledge of Communism as Orwell saw it for the rest of your life. It’s that simple. And you’d have read a great book whose ideology will stay with you for your lifetime and that’s always a plus.

2. 1984: I know it isn’t conventional to name two books by the same author but they’re both so good! And they’d both as likely stick with you and make you read more books so…

Read something depressing? 

I don’t judge, and I love my great share of depressing books and dystopian worlds. Here are some that shook me off my core and made me slag in my walk and hunch my shoulders in an attempt to curl up inwards for days.

1. Bell Jar: Sylvia Plath was always a mad poet who killed herself sticking her head in the oven to me. After this read though, I started to see reason in her stances to the extent that they drove me mental. To date I have the Fig Tree up on my wall, and it’s an immense source of inspiration if you’re looking for someone to tell you you’re not alone- that we’re all mad in our own statistically insignificant ways.

2. When Breath Becomes Air: Of course you’ve heard about it before. A recent release, New York Times Best Seller and an instant worldwide phenomenon in books, this is one you’ve seen on Goodreads and Facebook reading groups dozens of times. Here it is again to perhaps give you that last push for you to go order it on Amazon.

And finally – oh well – here go all my cents:

Pick up Nick Hornby’s Polysyllabic Spree.

Nick Hornby is an obsessive reader with an eccentric number of favorite genres and this book is literally his ‘Stuff I’ve been Reading’, where, quite rationally, he’s dropped all the books he’d never recommend us to read and stuck to the great great recommendations. This book churned me out of my reading slack and gave me a long list of books that went straight to my ‘To Reads’ on Goodreads to guilt me into reading. If you’ve stuck with me and read till this part of my article, you definitely will love that book.

Image result for polysyllabic spree

Beware though- it could get you depressed about the number of books you’ve read so far.

If you’ve liked my recommendations so far, and want to discuss some of them or even better- some new books with me, here’s my profile on Goodreads.

– Swathi Chandrasekaran

 

Thoughts: Go Set a Watchman – Harper Lee

There are countless reasons why we love books- some of my favourite times, people, worlds and words are (quite unfortunately, if you think about it) from the fictional pages from books written eons and miles away from me. The most poignant of thoughts, concise of arguments and blatant of truths through my life have been aggregated through books. While that paints a picture of a bibliophile, I should add here that I am a very very regular, sparing reader who’s had a history of bad recommendations being handed over. That’s not the reason I am writing this now, though.

I found love when I read Wodehouse’s character Psmith and felt despair, shock and disbelief as I read through the creative masterpiece that The Book Thief was to me. When I read Harper Lee’s Go Set a Watchman, I found myself.

The protagonist Jean Louise Finch (Scout) is a 26 year old who had stayed blinded to the realities of the world until the course of the book takes over. She had failed to recognize the disparities the color of skin paints upon one, and stayed ignorant of even her close family’s stances and nature. I found myself echoing every emotion she felt- from the tom-boyishness that kicks in harder when she hits ‘womanhood’, to the way she staggers under the weight of the newfound knowledge of living in a world so broken.  I could go on and on about this book, and I am sure I would do exactly that in the coming weeks but for now, I’m going to let Harper Lee’s masterful words take over- in the hope it will get you to pick up the book or start a conversation about it.

“Prejudice, a dirty word, and faith, a clean one, have something in common: they both begin where reason ends.”

““A man can condemn his enemies, but it’s wiser to know them.”

“You said, in effect, ‘I don’t like the way these people do, so I have no time for them.’ You’d better take time for ’em, honey, otherwise you’ll never grow.”

“I thought we were just people. I have no idea”- Scout on race, color and identification.

On accepting a harshly thrown invective, Atticus calmly stands his ground and reasons, “I can take anything anybody calls me so long as it’s not true.”

“I need a watchman to lead me around and declare what he seeth every hour on the hour. I need a watchman to tell me this is what a man says but this is what he means to draw a line down the middle and say here is this justice and there is that justice and make me understand the difference.

I need a watchman to go forth and proclaim to them all that twenty-six years is too long to play a joke on anybody, no matter how funny it is.”

The title, the plot, the character arcs and their personality trait all boils down to one question I have been asking myself since Persepolis. How much of what we are is based on where we come from? And what do you do when where you come from and how you were raised has made you blind?

Go set a Watchman, says Harper Lee.

– Swathi Chandrasekaran

Always on the lookout for book recommendations. If you have some to make or have books to discuss, do let’s connect on Goodreads. Here’s me!

 

Thoughts: What Do You Care What Other People Think? – Richard Feynman

To me, this book didn’t meet the colossal standards of entertainment and intrigue presented by Surely You’re Joking Mr. Feynman but I read it anyway. It gets quite technical with the descriptions which demanded keen attention I did not possess the patience for while reading but the tone and character of Feynman that I loved through his previous book existed in the lines here as well- albeit in a more serious setting.

One line that resonated strongly with me came up in the very last page of the book:
“If we suppress all discussion, all criticism, proclaiming, “This is the answer, my friend; man is saved!” we will doom humanity for a long time to the chains of authority, confined to the limits of our present imagination.”

What a pithy way to summarise so many evils we have in our society today.

– Swathi Chandrasekaran
Find the book on Goodreads

Both those shadows are mine

Have you read The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and felt a sinking tightness of a knot in your belly as you begin to relate to the mad mad protagonist? I did, and this is a small ode to the piece of art that made me question concepts of sanity, anger and mental balance.

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– Swathi Chandrasekaran, Advait Nair, Maanasa Vijayasarathy and Porvika Bala; Designed by Siva Prakash (As a part of Team Feeds- NIT Trichy’s Official Media House)
To read more interesting pieces such as these, do check out the amazing work done by Team Feeds right here!