Saturday, May 11, 2019

Books and more: The Red Sari - a dramatized biography of Sonia Gan...

Books and more: The Red Sari - a dramatized biography of Sonia Gan...: A beautiful book on love, faith, conviction, politics, struggle for power and more...a story of a young shy girl who now stands in the spotlight unwillingly.

The Red Sari - a dramatized biography of Sonia Gandhi by Javier Moro






Let me start by STATING that I am not Pro-Congress. Let me also Confirm that I am Not Pro-BJP either. Actually, I am Anti-Politics because from the way I see it, my country does not have any worthy statesman. And that is the sad state of political affairs of my beloved country.

I am a believer of destiny, of courage, of conviction, of love and of duty and that is where I am blown away by “The Red Sari – A Dramatized Biography of SONIA GANDHI” by Javier Moro. While I understand that this is a largely and sometimes exaggerative account of the life and story of the lady who has been in the public eye since many years despite her reluctance, it does gain my sympathies.

The narrative starts from 24th May, 1991 in New Delhi with Sonia unable to accept the fact that the man she loves is dead. It starts with the family and the country preparing for the last rights of Rajiv Gandhi who was killed in a terrorist attack on 22nd May, 1991. This is the prelude to the story of young love that never even diminished with age or tiring circumstances.

Javier has beautifully described the romance between a young 18-year Sonia and a dashing young Rajiv. The statement by friend Christian von Stieglitz many years later about the budding romance between Sonia and Rajiv during their very first trip to Ely, a town little away from Cambridge sums up the beauty of their relationship. “The love between Rajiv and Sonia began right there, in the cathedral gardens, at that precise moment. It was something immediate. I never saw two people connect like that, and forever. From that moment until the day he died, they became inseparable.” If this isn’t the start to a beautiful love story…what is!!!



The book takes us through the inhibitions of a young Italian girl about meeting her beau’s formidable mother. It mentions the warmth that then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi exuded on meeting the girl and how over the years they become a force bound to each other unlike any mother-in-law daughter-in-law relationship we have heard of.

The book talks about the trials and tribulations that come with being a member of the Gandhi family.  It takes about internal family politics, it talks about regional, state and national politics. The book also shows us an insight into Indira Gandhi’s persona, her dilemma, her strengths, her weaknesses, her love for her children, her blinded indulgence towards Sanjay Gandhi, her distaste for her second daughter-in-law, Menaka Gandhi’s antics and political ambitions, her love for her country, her policies - some which worked and many which failed and her deep-rooted sense of duty towards India.  It talks about Sonia and Indira’s relationship and how despite coming from different countries and cultures, they complimented each other like cheese and wine.



The book is a wonderful insight into the First Family of India and somewhere manages to gain our sympathies. Sympathies for the young girl thrown into an unknown world and country, into a family which forever stayed in the Public eye; sympathies for a wife, a daughter-in-law and more importantly for a woman unwilling and reluctant to come into the spotlight.

I recommend this book to all those who are interested in politics and even to those who aren’t; because this book is not just about politics but also about human behaviors.

Five stars to the writer for penning this book down, tracing and documenting every noteworthy incident of Sonia’s life. 



Five stars to Sonia; the lady, the woman, the reluctant politician.



Tuesday, February 26, 2019

Books and more: The boy in the Striped Payjamas by John Boyne

Books and more: The boy in the Striped Payjamas by John Boyne: Hard hitting, thought provoking and deeply saddening. That’s how I would describe “The boy in the stripped payjamas” by John Boyn...

The boy in the Striped Payjamas by John Boyne



Hard hitting, thought provoking and deeply saddening.

That’s how I would describe “The boy in the striped payjamas” by John Boyne. The book came out in 2006 and was then adapted into a movie in 2008.

I had seen the movie and ever since wanted to read the book. I finally got it from Bookephia last month. The language is simple, straightforward and something even children can read. Unfortunately, the current generation might not understand the gravity and depth of the story because thankfully they have not seen hard times.

The book is a simply told story of a boy – Bruno, who lives with his family in Berlin, in Nazi Germany during World War II. When his father gets promoted and posted in Auschwitz-Birkenau which is an extermination and labour camp in Poland. The family reluctantly leaves behind the comforts and familiar sights and sounds of Berlin and move to Auschwitz.

Having no friends to play with, Bruno sets about exploring the stark surroundings of his new neighborhood. There beyond the barbed fence separating his house from the concentration camp he comes across Shmuel, a Polish boy who is now housed in the camp with hundreds of other inmates. Over the course of time, the two boys become friends and share stories of their childhood.

To the innocent Bruno, Shmuel seems a little strange and the place he stays in, even stranger. Shmuel is a secret that Bruno cannot disclose to his sister or his parents or just about anybody. Shmuel is a Jew who is housed in a Concentration camp, while Bruno’s father is the Commandant in charge of the camp!

During one family dinner Bruno hears that Bruno, his sister and mother are to return to their Berlin home and he runs over to share the news with his friend. Boys being boys, Bruno wants to see where Shmuel lives and so he changes into the stripped pajamas that everyone in Shmuel’s world wears and enters the camp. What happens next is what questions the very essence of the camps and Hitler’s regime.

John Boyne
John Boyne has touched upon a raw nerve through this book and it is indeed a book I would recommend as reading material in schools. History cannot be taught simply by reading textbooks; such true to life books must be read to understand the magnanimity of the situation.