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A conversation that happened some weeks ago

“My love story resembles a Wong Kar Wai movie…..images, dreams….silence….the lack of communication between the two….the lack of even an idea if there is any thing between the two. Only the viewers know how it is…i mean both sides of the story.”

“Holy mother of god!”

“The involved characters never know, not even after the end credits roll down the screen.”

“Glaagh!!”

“Man…o …man ….o man….I just read what I wrote….sounds good”

“Can i quote you on my Livejournal? Anonymously, of course. May I? please?”

“yeah…go ahead….anonymously.”

“Thank you”

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Moral Science

On 15th March last year, madhav bought Samit Basu’s The Simoqin Prophecies at Premiere bookstore, and a week later I borrowed it from him. I returned it to him at the beginning of May 2005, i.e this month, unread.

This Saturday, I found a copy of Simoqin at Blossom, and bought it. I was done reading it last night, took me about six hours.

Moral of the Story: The next time a friend wants to borrow a book, ask him to bugger off and buy his own copy.

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Nassty Pricess

So yesterday I went to The Forum, specifically the Landmark bookstore, to meet a friend sometime after work. Landmark has this uncanny habit of giving me nasty surprises, and yesterday was no exception. Right in front, there was a stack of the trades of Blade of The Immortal, Hiroaki Samura’s gory and occasionally hip look at Samurai lore. Now this is not the first time I’ve seen manga titles at Landmark, they have quite a large collection of teen manga titles like Negima and Ranma 1/2, but I am not too interested in them, really. Paying 400 Rs for a single teen title is too much for me, the last one I bought was for 120 Rs from MR Book Stall, a copy of Mars by Fumiyo Soryo, was not too impressed.

But now Blade of the Immortal? It features on my wishlist, and though I have the digital versions of the series, I would do anything to get the paperback. Or so I thought.

The retards had priced them at 750 Rs EACH. 750 Rupees for a 136 page book!! Stupid, stupid rat creatures!!

Anyways, there were also copies of David Lapham‘s crime series Stray Bullets Volume 1 ( 900 Rupees), Flight Vols 1 and 2, two anthologies of comics by independent creators, with very lush artwork ( 932 Rs and 1050 Rs, respectively), Mike Mignola’s Hellboy ( 750 Rs) and even The Art of Hellboy in softcover ( for 1025 Rs)

Ironically, I was about to bid on a complete run of Stray Bullets a couple of days ago on eBay, but very wisely managed to stop myself in time, because my credit card hasn’t quite recovered yet.

In other news, Vasu is back from his US trip with my package. Complete runs of Katsuhiro Otomo’s Akira and Brian Bendis and Alex Maleev’s run on Daredevil ( issues 19-70), woo hooo! Mucho thanks, gotjanx-sir, for all the help.

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Couple of things

Tim Burton’s movie Big Fish was based on a novel?? Nobody told me!

My sister, now in London with her husband, has got herself quite a nifty accent. The nice, “pretty good, innit?”-kind of an accent that I always wanted to acquire. No, really. I have a thing for proper Brit/Irish/Scottish accents. Reading Garth Ennis and watching Guy Ritchie movies do that to you.

Re-reading one of the best books from my boyhood ( Ahahaha, the word “boyhood” always cracks me up) – As The Crow Flies by Jeffrey Archer. The man might be a swindler and a perjuror, or whatever it is they call him, but that doesn’t take away the fact that he writes neat plot-driven stuff. Used to, rather. I think I need to reread the best of his epic-family-squabble-thingie (Kane and Abel and The Prodigal Daughter, all his latter-day output degenerated to the same pulpy two-guys-seperated-by-class-and-with-interwined-lives plot that Kane and Co did to perfection) Man, As The Crow Flies is getting me all nostalgic. I read it the first time when my younger uncle was getting married, and pissed off a lot of my Evil Relatives by taking the book to the wedding and punctuating the assembly with occasional sighs and giggles and “yeah, BABY!”s. That was the closest I came to being interested in entrepreneurship, or commerce of any sort. Charlie Trumper, the main character of the book was on my Personal Pantheon for quite sometime after that; matter of fact, I think I need to put him on again.

So a quick trip to Planet M resulted in my finding an album long on the list of personal curiosities – The Essential Tri Atma. What’s so special about this band? Just that the third song on the album, O Moena was ripped off in the famous Siyaram ads of the eighties ( Remember that tune? “O Siyaram, coming home to Siyaram” and all that jazz…) Listening to the album right now, and the rest of the songs are pretty good. The band Tri Atma is made up of a Bengali percussionist Ashim Saha( “O Moena” starts off in Bangla, and it seems it’s about a Mynah bird) and a German guitarist Jens Fischer, who also sequences the tracks. Considering that it’s a band from the seventies, the sound is extremely contemporary, the tabla used to good effect throughout.

So I also moved flats in Hyderabad. I was there for two days this week, and thankfully, didn’t break my back lifting crates of books, because we hired a bunch of movers who did everything ( except the packing, which we did ourselves). The move was necessary because vrikodhara is all set to leave for Calcutta, and we were paying too much for the three-bedroom apartment, which was also beginning to resemble something that was a cross between a bombed-out refugee center and a set from the Texas Chainsaw Massacre. So this new place is a two-bedroom flat, the only disadvantage being that it gets nastily hot in the summer. I was really worried my books would spontaneously combust or something – because I came into the house at 5:30 PM on Tuesday, about to leave for Bangalore, and it felt like I had walked into an oven. It’s not the house’s fault, though. Hyderabad is a bloomin’ oven in May. It rained sometime in the night during the bus journey and I woke up shivering early in the morning, as it entered Bangalore.

I took a picture of my room right after the packing was complete; Sasi, friendly reminder, send me the photograph, will you?

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