“A positive mix of experimental, electronic, modern classical and blunted hip hop breaks to uplift and invigorate you.”
I have got absolutely nothing to do with this, but it sounds like a lot of fun. It's Siddhartha‘s new baby.
“A positive mix of experimental, electronic, modern classical and blunted hip hop breaks to uplift and invigorate you.”
I have got absolutely nothing to do with this, but it sounds like a lot of fun. It's Siddhartha‘s new baby.
Kaaya: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19.
The photo industry's premier trade show in the US, PhotoPlus Expo, is going to run from October 20 through October 22 at the Jacob Javits Convention Center, in New York city.
I won't be making it to the event this year but those of you who want to register for the expo portion of the event for free, click here to register. This offer is good until September 30.
For once, I am getting ahead of myself. The October Tiffinbooks selection is For Ganesh, Remover of Obstacles, by Sujoya Roy.
Here is a blurb about it:
At the heart of “Ganesh” is a daughter's quest to uncover her mother’s concealed past. The novel explores the challenges faced by an independent spirit breaking from the rigidity of an ancient culture; the customs that bind families; and the sometimes painful clashes between generations — in this case a mother’s perplexing devotion to tradition versus her daughter’s questioning, modernist ways. Narrated by a contemporary New Yorker of Indian descent, “Ganesh” spans decades and continents, traversing the rise of Gandhi in India, through post-colonialist England into segregated 1950s America. Blending memoir and fiction, the narrative alternates between the current-day, “yuppie” life of a discontented daughter disillusioned with corporate America and the enticing story she discovers of her mother’s extraordinary past as a devotional dancer who defied her family to pursue her dreams.
Incorporating a modern romance and the fanciful love stories of Indian mythology, the story draws on Bharatanatyam, an exotic Indian dance form, as an illuminative subtext to gently decipher a mother, who despite courageous and pioneering accomplishments, fights ghosts that never leave her. What caused a mother to mysteriously escape a prearranged marriage, shirking her duty to her parents? How did she become the first woman at Princeton University? Why does she so guardedly conceal her history? And is her daughter destined to follow in her mother’s rebellious footsteps? In uncovering her mother’s story a daughter is freed of the burdens of expectation, and the vast historical, societal, and cultural disparities that cause conflict between generations are ultimately bridged by recognition of a common spirit.
If you know of other South Asian-American writers or you are a South Asian writer, please contact me at tiffinbooks [at] pipalproductions [dot] com. I would be thrilled to plug your published work here. No charge, except for a review copy for my ever expanding library.
Bembo's Zoo Do you know your ABCD's?
Paragraph: Workspace for Writers
“I/O Brush is a new drawing tool to explore colors, textures, and movements found in everyday materials by “picking up” and drawing with them.”
OpenStudio: An experiment in creativity, collaboration & capitalism
Upsample your image
Bembo's Zoo Do you know your ABCD's?
Paragraph: Workspace for Writers
“I/O Brush is a new drawing tool to explore colors, textures, and movements found in everyday materials by “picking up” and drawing with them.”
OpenStudio: An experiment in creativity, collaboration & capitalism
Upsample your image
For reasons of modesty and in the interest of saving you from getting clocked in the head for viewing potentially questionable images, I am moving this and the next installment of images in this series to the extended section of their respective posts. You will have to click the “Continue to read …” link below to view the images. Be warned that you or your colleagues at work may object to them. I am erring on the side of caution and not censoring them. If you have any comments about this policy or the series in general, please email me at tiffinbox [at] pipalproductions [dot] com. Thanks!
Kaaya: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17