Related Vacation Book Subjects: india Ahmedabad Anand Bharuch Bhavnagar Gandhinagar Jamnagar Junagadh Kachchh Kheda Navsari Panchmahal Porbandar Rajkot Surat Surendranagar Vadodara Valsad
More Pages: Gujarat Page 1 2
Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "Gujarat", sorted by average review score:

The master of Gujarat : a historical novel
Published in Unknown Binding by Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan ()
Author: Kanaiyalal Maneklal Munshi
Average review score:

Excellent book
This is one of 4/5 novels based on the history of Gujarat by the same author. It really keeps you engrossed.

Excellent book based on Gujarat's History
This book is based on Historical characters mainly Munjal Mehta(Prime Minister) and Minal devi (Queen), its a hidden love story behind politics of gujarat. This is great book if you know historical back ground of Gujarat, INDIA


Indian Merchants and Entrepreneurs in Historical Perspective: With a Special Reference to Shroffs of Gujarat: 17th to 19th Centuries
Published in Hardcover by South Asia Books (May, 1992)
Author: Makrand Mehta
Average review score:

Illuminating and Rich
The book provides indepth knowledge about the 'how and why' of the growth of entrepreneurs in Gujarat, India. It is a must read for researchers and scholars interested in rigorous analysis and historical facts regarding entrepreneurs.

Kudos Makrand Mehta!


The Cost of Living
Published in Paperback by Modern Library (01 October, 1999)
Author: Arundhati Roy
Average review score:

very compelling writing
The Cost of Living is the second book by Arundhati Roy, but is her first non fiction book. Her first book was the phenomenally good novel The God of Small Things . The Cost of Living is a collection of two essays.

The first is "The Greater Common Good" and deals with the building of the Big Dams in India (Roy is native to India and still lives there). Roy writes about some of the politics involved in the building of the dams and makes clear enormity of the human cost and the lives lost and displaced. Roy is vehemently against this ongoing project, and while this essay only presents one side of the argument, it is still a well crafted and well written and emotionally compelling argument.

The second essay is "The End of Imagination". This essay was written in 1998 shortly after India had revealed that it was doing nuclear testing. Apparently, the party line was that nuclear weaponry = patriotism = Hinduism = India. By this logic, any Indian who was not in favor of the testing was also against India itself. Flawed logic, and Roy takes the government to task focusing on nuclear testing when so much of the nation is starving, uneducated, and needs true assistance. Roy's arguments against nuclear testing are wide ranging. She discusses the fact that most of the nation is uneducated and does not know what it means to have nuclear weapons and what the negatives are. She writes against the government, lining its pockets at the expense of the nation. She writes against the United States for introducing the nuclear game to the world. The biggest loser in this game, Roy believes, is India. India believes itself to be a world player, but Roy explains the national delusion and why this is simply not the case.

This is a short, but interesting book. Roy is an excellent writer and while her thoughts skirt the extreme, she writes with a passion that cannot be ignored.

Brave & Universal - not just for Indians!
Arundhati Roy has a wonderful way of writing. This woman could write about absolutely anything at all and I think I will still enjoy it. She has a naturally earnest free flowing poetic yet precise language. She has the ability to choose her words so well as to get the exact picture or impression she wants us to see. Truly she paints with her words.

Roy used her amazing writing skills and sensitivity so very well in her fantastic work, The God of Small Things. Here she uses the same skills and more aiming primarily at her own people asking them to re-examine 2 strongly held views. As non-Indian I thoroughly enjoyed both essays of this book.

The first essay deals with the construction of river dams in India since the independence in 1947. Roy set about in a very systematic way to establish the true cost of the dams in terms of human suffering. She focused on one project in particular but her research was wide ranging and indeed she had to dig into several completed projects to establish true benefits and costs. Roy's central message is that the price paid by an oppressed native minority is way too high and the alleged benefits to India are low. Where this essay is truly universal, at least applicable to so many third world countries in the post colonial era, is in its research for a definition for her own country, identity and common good and modes of opposition to this common good! Roy was also highly unimpressed with the western approach to 3rd world development projects but her approach was a times too general and sweeping.

The Second article, probably far more universal, is the nuclear weapons article. Roy's analysis of the policies of the Congress party and the BJP nationalists leading to the 1998 explosions shows great insight and clarity of mind. She categorically opposes the bomb as weapon of peace and she totally rejects the overwhelming support of her people for the bomb and the Indian nuclear tests. Having traveled to India shortly after the Indian and Pakistani explosions I was horrified with the attitude of "our bomb was better than theirs" and this is the first work that I personally have seen that takes on this subject with such force. Roy's opposition leaves no prisoners behind. It is hard to overstate the courage of Roy on this issue given the level of tension between Hindu India and Islam within India itself and across the borders.

I strongly recommend this wonderfully written book to anyone interested in issues related to regional conflicts and postcolonial development.

A Must Read for privileged Indian-Americans!
Not a book that would wow the reader with eloquence, but a passionate and serious account of two examples of the folly of massive state-sponsored projects "for the people's good."

What not enough reviewers have taken into account is the book's implicit indictment of modern Western thought, culture & politics on India's -- and Pakistan's -- people.

India & Pakistan are at war primarily because of the original British plan for Partition that created separate Hindu and Muslim states. Skillful Western diplomacy that has played one off against the other for fifty years keeps passions high and these two nations at each other's throats -- to neither's benefit.

By playing India & Pakistan off each other, each nation has been unable to break free from Soviet-style planning and join the rest of the developed world. They instead measure progress by 1940s and 1950s standards, both Soviet and Western, and the results, as outlined by Roy in this book, are devastating.

Now, the World Bank and IMF (whom Roy despise) are propping up the smaller middle-class at the great expense of most of India's population. 600 million illiterates; poor sanitation, hygiene, family planning & health care; and a completely corrupt economy are the problems -- yet Roy shows clearly that the state is moving in a direction farther away from solutions.

The West must take a great deal of responsibility for this, and the passion of Roy can't help but move one to action.


Gujarat After Godhra: Real Violence, Selective Outrage
Published in Hardcover by Har-Anand Publications (January, 2003)
Author: Ramesh N. Rao
Average review score:

Useless book
Better to read daily articles in indian news websites . They do better job in criticizing Hindus in India. This book tries to do the same but failed in convincing arguments. In anycase, IF you are pseudo secular or anti hindu , you will get some arguments for your discussion. If you have some sense , you will laugh at this book and throw it out (Or resale it )


Gujarat: The Making of a Tragedy
Published in Paperback by Penguin India (01 January, 2002)
Author: Siddharth Varadarajan
Average review score:

What a nightmare
This book is completly nightmare. If you are aware of Gujarat than you should read it so that you can laugh at it. IF you do not have any knowledge about Gujarat, than read it as a Fiction book.


Abolition of Poverty in India: With Special Reference to Target Group Approach in Gujarat
Published in Hardcover by Vikas Publishing House (September, 1986)
Author: Indira Hirway
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Agricultural marketing in Gujarat
Published in Unknown Binding by Concept Pub. House ()
Author: Anita Arya
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Agricultural taxation in Gujarat
Published in Unknown Binding by Asia Pub. House ()
Author: Mahesh T. Pathak
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Aradhakamurti/Adhisthayakamurti: Popular Piety, Politics, and the Medieval Jain Temple Portrait (Schweizer Asiatische Studien. Monographien, Bd. 42.)
Published in Hardcover by Peter Lang Publishing (July, 2003)
Author: Jack C. Laughlin
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Asramano prana : Sva. Maganalala Gandhi visena lekhono sangraha
Published in Unknown Binding by Navajåivana Prakåaâsana Mandira ()
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Related Vacation Book Subjects: india Ahmedabad Anand Bharuch Bhavnagar Gandhinagar Jamnagar Junagadh Kachchh Kheda Navsari Panchmahal Porbandar Rajkot Surat Surendranagar Vadodara Valsad
More Pages: Gujarat Page 1 2


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