Wednesday, December 23, 2015

Review of Take 2 by Ruchi Singh



After marrying Sameer, her childhood love, Priya gets a job in Delhi. Subsequently, they shift to Delhi from their home town Kanpur. Sameer is highly ambitious and wants to make a career in modelling. As a struggler he sustains on the income earned by Priya. Their relationship sours when Sameer ditches and dumps her for a well-established top model Jessica and starts to live with her. Then, she happens to meet Abhimanyu, a cousin of her friend Komal. He instantly falls for her and the story begins.
Being attracted towards a married woman, Abhimanyu is warned and becomes a bit apprehensive about the future of this relationship. On the other hand, keeping in view of her marital status, though on rocks, Priya too is not very enthusiastic about her future with Abhi, at least till the case of her divorce is settled. This is a story of love, hate, vengeance, jealousy, compromises and compulsions. Whether Priya and Abhi manage to turn the tide in their favor, read Take 2 by Ruchi Singh, published by Author’s Ink Publications, Rohtak.
Pros:
The strongest point of this novel is its narration. Though the story is simple having not much twists and turns and runs in linear fashion, its language has made it extremely interesting. The command of the authoress over the language impresses and even sometimes hypnotizes the reader for a spellbound reading. The novel is edited perfectly and typed with dexterity leaving no space for spelling or grammar mistakes. Congratulations!
Cons:
The story is so simple that at times it generates a tad disinterest in the mind of a reader. I wouldn’t say that it drags, but certainly it slows down as nothing much happens between the protagonists; courtesy to their war of nerves. The subplot, when Abhimanyu is falsely trapped by his colleague Vikram on the pretext of causing a serious roadside accident to him, is loosely knit, technically erroneous and fails to convince the reader beyond reasonable comprehension. Accidents are police cases and need immediate medical examination of the injured person in a government hospital and neither the police nor the doctors are so naïve not to judge the cocks-and-bull story of a person who pretends as seriously injured that he stays in comma for two days, not even when bribed.
Final Take:
Ruchi Singh has done a commendable job by presenting a simple story in a very crispy and lucid language and I look forward for more books from her pen. Best of luck!



An excerpt from Take 2 :
“A wave of regret and sorrow moved on his face. He caught hold of her arms and jerked her against him. She gasped. Plastering her against him, he kissed her, as if there’s no tomorrow. Then he pushed her free, as if she was a piece of smoldering coal and stormed out of the house, slamming the door shut.” Page 140.
New words I learned:       Beanpole, Eon, Balk, Chignon, Muss, Brocade, Sweet-nothings and Chagrin
Rating: 3.5/5

By Rajeev Pundir



Monday, October 26, 2015

RAPE: AN AVOIDABLE MISHAP



Firstly a bitter story…
Long back, when I was a consultant in Moolchand Medicity, two boys; one in twenties and the other in teens, entered my OPD. It was their third or fourth visit for getting some treatment for their non-specific abdominal complaints. In routine, I asked them how they were feeling. They said—fine. And they stopped like thinking to say something but hesitating. Getting them confused, as they had become a bit friendly to me during this period of their visits, I asked them to say whatever they want to without hesitation, but fast as other patients were waiting for their turn.
“Sir, do you have something to increase the sexual power?” the younger one mumbled shyly.
In the first place, I was surprised on the query which was embarrassing enough not only for them but for me too to reply—to my too young patients seeking treatment for sexual disorder. To get a clear idea, as I was not expecting them to have medicine to increase their libido at this age, I asked, “Yes, we have. For whom?”
This time the elder one stuttered, “For ourselves—sir.”
“Yourself?” I exclaimed.
“Yes sir,” they nodded.
“Are you, I mean, both of you married?” I asked them in amazement. I also knew that they were real brothers.
“No,” they nodded in negation.
“Then, must be having girlfriends?” I quipped and laughed towards them—supposing them a bit misguided and confused by their peers boasting their unstoppable, enormous sexual prowess— a normal phenomenon among friends making them subdued with inferiority complex.
“No sir,” they replied having an stilted smile showing their embarrassment.
Perhaps they were expecting me to write a prescription for them, in routine, without going into deep details.
“Then, how do you know that you’re sexually weak? In fact, where do you test if you don’t have girlfriends?” I tried to know the reason simply as I did never expect a person at this age coming for sexual weakness.
And the answer they offered shocked and shook me to the core.
Aunties,” one of them replied.
Their demeanor was telling that they were serious and not joking in any manner. However, I couldn’t trust on my ears hearing that word—aunties!
For a while I was dumbstruck. I looked at them in utter disbelief and astonishment and tried to get an elaborated account what did they mean.
“Aunties? What do you mean?” I wondered and frowned at them.
“Sir, our immediate neighbors and a few of our mom’s friends,” the elder one told. Till that time their shyness had vanished and they had become quite frank—brazen to say precisely.
“How?” flabbergasted, I asked again.
“Aunties, who remain lonely when their husbands are away on official tours for weeks and their children are in school, they call us, serve us the best of wines and show us the porn movies on TV. This is great fun. But they’re too demanding. That’s why we’ve come to you,” the younger one described their hunky-dory with their femme fatale aunties.
Being an astute observer by nature, I tried to know more and out of curiosity asked them, “Do your mom not know all or something about it?”
“No sir! Not the least. When they come to our home to have a chat with mom, we even don’t see eye-to-eye,” and they tittered.
Stunned, I closed my eyes. Perhaps that was my first encounter with the harsh and ugly reality of our society—where our neighbors, relatives, family friends, known-to-uncles and aunties and cousins are exploiting our kids and playing extremely dirty and shameful games behind the veils—behind the veils of our good-relations with them.
How dangerous they can be, I thought.

The above incident, which is not one off, coincides with the statistics of rape and sodomy cases in our society putting the onus on only ones—the known ones in more than 80% cases. (Please refer the latest news items’ headlines attached as a photograph.) Even a few celebrities (name withheld), both male and female, have accepted that they were molested, raped and sodomized by their close-relatives and family-friends during their childhood.



Now the moot question is—can we prevent it?
YES, to some extent—provided we take a few cautious measures.
1.      Be possessive about your wards till they cross their education at least at school level.
2.      Never trust anyone, whosoever maybe; a servant, a maid, a family friend, a relative, a tenant, a landlord, a neighbor and other fringe elements visiting your house time-to-time like presswala, sabziwala, plumber, electrician etc. etc.
3.      Learn to distrust anyone coming in contact your kids; a teacher, a tutor, their playmates and school friends including all the above as mentioned at no.2
4.      Keep a close watch and strict vigil on the behavior of the above mentioned people. Beware! You maybe dodged by their extremely cordial, sweet and friendly attitude towards all your family members.
5.      Don’t allow your kids to play with others in separate rooms or in lonely parks. NEVER.
6.      Gone are the days when we would visit our relatives on maternal and paternal sides during winter and summer vacations. Yet, if you’re obliged to visit for some unavoidable reasons, don’t allow your little ones to sleep with any of your relatives or their kids—howsoever nice they maybe.
7.      It’s easy to proclaim that the girls should have all kinds of liberties and be allowed to roam anytime anywhere. Yes, I’m also the big proponent of all kinds of freedom to the girls—but not at the cost of their security and dignity.
8.      Dear guys and gals, you’ve to save yourselves—by not strolling at odd hours, by not attending late-night parties, clubs, discos and pubs, by not mingling not only with strangers but with known ones at odd hours and at lonely places. If you do it, it’s your risk and no government may save you if you fall prey to some predator.
9.      If we think deep into our hearts—is all this possible? Dear friends, where boys are not safe in our society, can we expect a foolproof security and guarantee of the safety of our girls? And who’ll provide? The answer is obvious—NO.
10.  Never leave your innocent kids in the custody of a neighbor, a relative or whosoever maybe for whatsoever reason.
11.  Remember—even Sita was not spared and got kidnapped on being left alone by godly Ram and mighty Laxman. We’re nothing but petty human beings.
Dear friends, in any given society, crimes cannot be stopped absolutely. However, we can reduce them—by preventing them. And the above measures may seem to be impractical to invoke but I’m sure that our cautious attitude towards little things in our routine life may save our kids from the menace of rape, molestation and sodomy.
We cannot teach or preach morality and idealism or pray and beg the people not to rape and molest our children. Nobody is ready to listen. These are the hard hitting facts of our life—you may disagree but cannot deny them.
CHANCES TO BE HARMED BY UNKNOWN ARE SELDOM WHEREAS THE KNOWN MAY ATTACK LIKE A GORILLA ANYTIME—KEEPING AN EVIL EYE ON OUR KIDS 24X7, STEALTHILY.  
SO BEWARE OF THE KNOWN FIRST!
AS—PREVENTION IS ALWAYS BETTER THAN CURE.
Thanks for kind reading!!

                                                                                                           
 Rajeev Pundir, MD (Ayu.)
 An Ayurvedic specialist,    Novelist  and  a Columnist.                                                                                                                              


Friday, September 4, 2015

REVIEW OF "KLASS" By PRITA YADAV

This novel I got from the writer Prita Yadav to get my honest reviews. Thanks a lot Prita.
This is the story of a girl Jolene Jordan who is admitted into the sports academy named "Klass" by her father who she hates to the core of her heart. The writer has tried her best to portray the life and times of the student-life in the academy in a stereotypical manner but the lucid language of the writer has made it quite interesting and readable. During the narration, the writer has been successful in bringing out the hidden talent, nature, pains and sufferings of the students; male and the female both and their family backgrounds which they come from. Obviously, some are from wealthy and cultured families whereas some, like Jolene, Jogeshwar, and Teju are from poor and broken or dysfunctional background and their frustration reflects in their actions. Emphasis has been given on the nature of Jolene, nicknamed Jo, who is arrogant, outrageous and to extent delinquent due to her family-background and wants to run away from the academy.
To know whether she's able to stay there or not and whether her behavior changes or not, I recommend that you should go through this book.
On the flip side:
There're so many. To begin with, this is tad lengthy novel. A short edition with less chapters would have been better deleting unnecessary and redundant chapters. As a rule, if a chapter is not helpful in taking the story further, it should be deleted otherwise it becomes a boring stuff. The second one is inclusion of a large number of non-contributing characters, though needed for the kind of story of a school, create confusion and disinterest in the reader. The third one is its tag line or the theme--Passion. The reader becomes curious right from the cover of the book, which could have been better, to know about the passion of the protagonist but fails to notice throughout the book which is disappointing. Anything described about the main character Jo,like her interest in writing, in history, in race etc. is revealed just by chance on different occasions. She improves slowly without any passion led by circumstances and that's where the story faltered. Telling the theme in the form of the interview of Kanchan Singh Yadav, the patron of the academy, is too late. The theme should synchronize with the main plot and not with the sub-plots, I suppose.

Yes, the writing prowess of the writer shows her 'Passion' for writing. She has a flair and a good potential for writing more books and I wish her a bright future as an author.

Overall Ratings: 3/5

RAJEEV PUNDIR