Four levels of ‘The Lottery’ by Shirley Jackson
The Lottery
Four levels of ‘The Lottery’ by Shirley Jackson Read Post »
Rabindranath Tagore is a gem of Indian literature, known all over the world for his amazing works in the domains of prose, poetry, and dramas. If you have read his writings, you must have inevitably experienced an out-of-this-world triangle of philosophy, humanism, and mysticism. No wonder, he won the Nobel Prize for literature in 1913.
Four Levels of Chandalika by Rabindranath Tagore Read Post »
Only after reading this book that I realized how much I have missed about life and its meaning from a totally different yet simplest possible perspective that the author has put in the book. This article is just a humble and innocent attempt to present what I could grasp from the book and found worth sharing with the world.
Reviewing “Man’s Search for Meaning” by Viktor E. Frankl Read Post »
It’s up to the person to decide to do the things that make one great, to be like the Tortoise: tough against threats, yet popping his head and feet out when there’s something good for him to explore; the Hare, ruled by instinct; or the Rat: destined to be unknown.
Quit that Rat Race! Read Post »
I may be in love. I have fallen for the lady who doesn’t even exist or may have existed hundreds or thousands of years ago. While working on the third charcoal replica of one of Leonardo Da Vinci’s famous paintings, “Leda and the Swan”, I fell for that Renaissance Playboy model, I suppose.
21st Century Renaissance Read Post »
f you have taken an English course at the university, you must have inevitably come across the name Alden Nowlan. Does that ring a bell? My best guess is that your professor asked you to submit an assignment on “The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner” by Alden Nowlan.
Four levels of ‘The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner’ by Alden Nowlan Read Post »
A school is a place where a hundred people read the same book. That’s downright stupidity. Those one hundred people can read one hundred books. Do the math. So wake up. Kick ass. Repeat. Life’s like that.
Wake Up. Kick Ass. Repeat. Read Post »
I just finished reading one of the masterpieces by Gabriel Garcia Marquez, and as you have guessed correctly, it is none other than “One Hundred Years of Solitude”. So this article is an honest and naïve attempt to summarize this novel. To be honest, I couldn’t stop myself from writing about it. So here we go.
Analysis of “One Hundred Years of Solitude” by Gabriel Garcia Marquez Read Post »
This track “Lost in the Serengeti” is taken from the Album “The Retribution”, performed by Nawaj Ansari. If you know this legend and have purged your soul with his lyrical hymns, then I needn’t say more about him. If you haven’t even heard about him, then I doubt if you really live on the same planet as I do.
Decoding Nawaj Ansari: Lost in the Serengeti Read Post »
Lots of people have reached the top of the world ever since Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay Sherpa first put their human steps on the summit of Mt. Everest. It was no less a giant step for mankind than the one that Neil Armstrong put on the moon in 1969. Now take all the 14 giant peaks standing tall above 8,000 meters and think about leaving marks on their summits in less than a year. Seems impossible, right!?
Nimsdai’s Project Possible: 14 Peaks Read Post »