Monday, 3 March 2014

Virat Kohli :Not shocked by loss, impressed with team's character

Mirpur (Bangladesh): His team is on the verge of being knocked out of the Asia Cup after back-to-back losses but India`s stand-in skipper Virat Kohli said he is not at all shocked by the prospect as his side is massively inexperienced even though it has shown "character".

India have lost consecutive matches to Sri Lanka and arch-rivals Pakistan in the five-team event and are all but out of contention for a spot in the final. "I`m not shocked at all. I`m really proud of the way the boys fought it out. I`m really proud of the way the team showed character in the field and with the bowling as well. 245 against a team like Pakistan and on that wicket with the dew is not easy to defend, but I think the guys showed a lot of character," Kohli said after the one-wicket loss to Pakistan here.

The defeat was crushing for the fact that India could have nailed it had it not been for successive sixes struck by Shahid Afridi in the final over of the game. "If you see the kind of batsmen they had and our bowlers with the inexperience they had, still to put up that kind of fight. I mean you see (Amit) Mishra, he gave only 28 runs in 10 overs, took two wickets, bowled brilliantly against the likes of Misbah, Hafeez, Umar Akmal, Shahid Afridi. So I think it was a commendable effort and I`m really, really proud of the way the guys fought it out," Kohli said.

"If you compare the experience of our team with their team, it`s massive, it`s huge. And in International cricket it really counts a lot. You can get away with it in Twenty20, but in the 50-over format you need to show a lot of character and that`s exactly what the boys did," he added.

Defending a modest 246, Indian bowlers, particularly Mishra (2/28 from 10 overs) and R Ashwin (3/44), took the match to the wire and Pakistan were left needing nine runs off the last four balls with one wicket in hand.

But Afridi`s big blows sealed the win which took Pakistan a step closer to the final. Defending his decision to give Ashwin the last over, Kohli said: "I knew that if I put the seamers in before and Ashwin comes to bowl, they will go for it. Wickets are all we wanted. If Afridi and Umar Gul had just played singles they would have won easily. I took that risk of putting the seamers in and making them hit the ball. We almost pulled it off as well in the end."

"Those last two sixes were not quite off the middle of the bat. One side was a small boundary, but that`s how it goes. We almost pulled it off." Showering more praise on Mishra, the skipper said the decision to draft in the leg-spinner was taken after their loss to Sri Lanka in the previous match. "Even with the dew, if you can get the wicket to dry out, and these wickets are pretty dry, so if the bowler can bowl three deliveries in an over on an area, it`s much better for the spinner. He has more of a wicket-taking chance compared to the fast bowlers.

"With dew coming in at the end, the fast bowlers tend to go for plenty of runs. That was the idea in the last game itself. Rohit Sharma had contained them (Sri Lanka) pretty nicely and there I made a decision that we should go with three spinners," he explained.

"These guys have a lot of right-handers in the squad as well and Mishra turns to the ball, so I wanted that attacking bowler in the bowling line-up and it almost paid off for us. I think he and Ashwin were the difference in the game today. The way they controlled that situation was magnificent." Kohli felt Mishra showed a lot of courage in taking up the challenge he threw at him.

"I`ve always been really impressed by Amit Mishra. He`s an attacking bowler, which I like as well. He always likes to make the batsman take on that extra fielder inside the circle. The way he bowled with such a small target to defend I think it was brilliant on his part," he said.

"The amount of character he showed, he certainly put his hand up. In the future as well, if we want to play with three spinners or we want to go with the same kind of bowling attack, he would certainly be one of our priorities. "He`s brilliant with the ball, turns it on any sort of wicket and today he showed what he could do. I`m really, really happy for him."

Asked why Mishra was not considered for earlier matches, Kohli said: "Well that`s one thing you can say now. If he went for 70 in 10 I don`t think you would have asked me that question." Kohli also gave credit to Afridi for his unbeaten 18-ball 34 that proved to be the difference between both the teams. "He has always been big hitter, but we also took a chance that if he mistimes one of Ashwin`s carrom balls at the end, then we`ll have a good chance. It was like that, if he had mistimed it, we would have won, and if he hit a good shot the game would have gone the other way.

"That was the plan, that he likes to play his shots and hopefully if one is mistimed and goes to hand then we can have a good chance. It went in the air two or three times, but credit to him, they cleared the boundary well."

Asia Cup 2014: Afghanistan vs Sri Lanka - As it happened...

Afghanistan innings:

Over 38.4 || Score 124/10 

With the required run-rate soaring at more than seven runs per over, Afghanistan slumped to their worst defeat of the tournament. The lower and the middle-order batsmen couldn't live up to the pressure and the Lankans had strengthened their grip over the match, the moment Mohammad Nabi was dismissed. Sri Lanka remain unbeaten in the tournament and have deservedly cruised to the finals.

Mirwais Ashraf c NLTC Perera b de Silva 1 (18b)

Dawlat Zadran b Mendis 0 (8b)

Hamza Hotak lbw b Mendis 1 (13m 14b )

Mohammad Nabi lbw b de Silva 37 (43b)

Najibullah Zadran c Mathews b NLTC Perera 11 (35b)

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Over 30 || Score 110/5 

Afghanistan scored 37 runs in the last ten overs and lost one wicket of Samiullah Shenwari. While they have managed to keep wickets in hand, the required run-rate is rapidly increasing as they now need 144 runs from 20 overs.

Samiullah Shenwari c Thirimanne b Lakmal 6 (19b)


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Over 20 || Score 73/4

Sri Lanka have struck back by picking three wickets, including of set batsmen Stanikzai and Zadran in the last ten overs. Thisara Perera picked two of those wickets and Afghanistan are in some sort of trouble now.

Nawroz Mangal c Sangakkara b NLTC Perera 4 (13b)

Noor Ali Zadran c de Silva b Mendis 21 (41b)

Asghar Stanikzai b NLTC Perera 27 (34b)

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Over 10 || Score 39/1

Sri Lanka got their first breakthrough when after smashing Lakmal for a fabulous six, opener Mohammad Shahzad was dismissed while trying to play another big stroke. The first wicket fell at 8 and since then, Asghar Stanikzai and Noor Ali Zadran have added unbeaten 31 runs for the second-wicket partnership.

Mohammad Shahzad b Lakmal 7 (7b)

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Sri Lanka innings:

Over 50 || Score 253/6 

Angelo Mathews and Thisara Perer failed to score big in the last seven overs as Sri Lanka managed to cross the 250-run mark. Afghanistan bowlers once again impressed with their line and length and it's time for their batsmen to show their mettle.

Angelo Mathews 45* (41b) Thisara Perera 19* (23b)

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Over 43 || Score 195/6

Dawlat Zadran took his first wicket in the form of P Silva as Sri Lanka lost their sixth wicket. Silva was playing well but eventually got out after scoring seventeen runs off 16 balls. From here on Sri Lanka must be thinking of a score near 250, whereas, Afghanistan will try to restrict them within 220. 

PC de Silva c Mirwais Ashraf b Dawlat Zadran 17 (16b)

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Over 40 || Score 171/5

Afghanistan were right back in the game when Sri Lanka lost the wickets of Chandimal and Sangakkara in just four balls. While Chandimal was bowled by Hamza Hotak, Sangakkara was run-out while he attempted for a suicidal single which was never there. Angelo Mathews and Chaturanga de Silva are the two new batsmen at the crease and Afghanistan have a real chance of containing the Lankans for less than 250 with some good bowling.

KC Sangakkara run out 76 (102b)

LD Chandimal b Hamza Hotak 26 (41b)

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Over 35 || Score 148/3 

Kumar Sangakkara has once again come to the rescue of the Lankans and has been involved in an unbeaten 65-run partnership with Dinesh Chandimal. Afghanistan need to pick the wicket of Sanga as soon as possible, if they want to bundle the Lankans out for a paltry total.

Kumar Sangakkara 69* (95b) Dinesh Chandimal 24* (36b)

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Over 25 || Score 95/3

Mahela Jayawardene poor form continues as he once again got out cheaply. Ashraf was the bowler on this occasion too. Chandimal is the next man in after the fall of third Sri Lankan wicket. Afghan bowlers are bowling impressively and still not giving much room to Lankan batsmen to free their arms. 

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Over 17 || Score 54/2

Kusal Perera who was playing a watchful innings lost his concentration and gave his wicket. Mirqaiz Ashraf got the better of Perera. The right-handed batsman tried to play a cut shot but got the thick inside edge and was played on. Perera got out after scoring 33 runs. After the fall of second Sri Lankan wicket, Mahela Jayawardene walked in to bat. Sri Lankan run rate is under 3.2 at the moment. Meanwhile, SL have crossed the mark of fifty runs in the 16th over. 


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Over 10 || Score 35/1

Afghanistan bowlers are still troubling the Sri Lankan batsmen. In the sixth over their speedster Shapoor Zadran once again gave his team the first breakthrough of the day in the form of H Thirimanne. After pitching at off stump line his ball nipped back in sharply and crashed into the stumps of the southpaw. Man in form Sangarakkara walked into the middle after the fall of first Lankan wicket. 

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Over 5 || Score 12/0

In the first five overs Afghanistan bowlers bowled at a tight line and hardy gave any room to Sri Lankan openers to free their arms. So once again a good start by Afghani bowlers. And if they keep up this pressure for some more time Sri Lankan batsmen might get frustrated. 

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Sri Lanka have won the toss and elected to bat first. It means Sri Lanka want to set up a big total in front of the minnows Afghanistan to put them under pressure. 

Indian players and fans will see this match very eagerly as they would want Afghanistan to win the match, so that their chances to reach the finals of the Asia Cup remain intact. 

Sri Lanka have a good batting line up and their experienced player Kumar Sangakkara has been in good form. Apart from him, Lankan openers are also playing confident cricket. So here SL will look for a score somewhere near 320. 


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Mirpur: After beating Bangladesh for their first major win over a Test-playing nation, giantkillers Afghanistan would look to continue their flirtation with cricketing history when they take on leaders Sri Lanka in their Asia Cup cricket match, today.

Buoyed by their spirited effort of taming Bangladesh by 32 runs in their own den at Fatullah Saturday, the gutsy team from the strife-torn nation would be eyeing another major upset against Sri Lanka. The minnows would find it difficult to achieve further glory in the five-nation tournament against an increasingly stronger opponent Sri Lanka, who are sitting comfortably atop the points table with eight points after scoring back-to-back victories against Pakistan and India.

With two wins and a healthy runrate of +0.168, Sri Lanka have virtually assured themselves of a berth in the finals of Asia Cup, while Afghanistan`s hopes of further progress in the tournament would depend on the outcome of the match tomorrow. Afghanistan have four points from two matches with one win and a loss in their kitty. However, they don`t have anything to lose from this tournament as they are featuring in the Asia Cup for the first time in its history.

Ukraine crisis live updates: Pro-Russia protesters occupy govt building in Donetsk

5.19 pm: Pro-Russia protesters occupy regional govt in Donetsk
DONETSK: Pro-Russian demonstrators occupied the first floor of the regional government building in east Ukraine's city of Donetsk on Monday.
A Reuters reporter in a press centre on the fourth floor of the building said the protesters had seized the first floor but were unable to go higher because lifts were disabled and stairwell doors shut.
The 11-storey building has been flying the Russian flag, rather than the Ukrainian flag, for three days, with demonstrators carrying Russian flags staging rallies outside. - Reuters
5.05 pm: EU to urge mediation with Russia over Ukraine
BRUSSELS: European Union foreign ministers will push on Monday for high-level mediation to resolve the crisis over Russia's invasion of Crimea, while threatening the possibility of sanctions if Russia does not back down.
In emergency talks convened after Russian President Vladimir Putin seized the Crimean peninsula and said he had the right to invade Ukraine, ministers will try to strike a balance between pressure on Moscow and finding a way to calm the situation.
Germany, France and Britain, the EU's most-powerful nations, are all advocating mediation to resolve the crisis, possibly via the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, while not ruling out economic measures if Moscow does not cooperate.
"Crisis diplomacy is not a weakness but it will be more important than ever to not fall into the abyss of military escalation," German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier told reporters as he arrived for the talks in Brussels. - Reuters
 
A Ukrainian woman looks at military personnel, believed to be Russian servicemen, standing outside the territory of a Ukrainian military unit in the village of Perevalnoye outside Simferopol on March 3, 2014. REUTERS/Baz Ratner
5 pm: Ukraine increases Russian gas imports, braces for price hike
KIEV/LONDON: Ukraine has increased gas imports from Russiaover the last few days, a spokesman for Ukraine's gas transit monopoly said on Monday, amid warnings that state gas producer Gazprom might scrap a discount on prices.
As concerns grow over gas supplies after Russian President Vladimir Putin won parliamentary approval to invade Ukraine, analysts say Kiev is trying to import as much gas as possible at the lower prices.
Moscow, enraged with Ukraine's new pro-EU government, has warned Kiev it could lose the discount it currently gets from Gazprom due to Kiev's outstanding gas debt.
"We doubled our gas imports from Russia. We imported 45 million cubic metres of gas on March 1, 2014, compared with 20 million on March 1, 2013," said Maxim Belyavsky, a spokesman for Ukraine's gas transit monopoly Ukrtransgas.
Ukraine is a major buyer of gas from Gazprom, which exported almost 26 bcm of gas to its neighbour last year, more than half of the 50.4 bcm it consumed. - Reuters
4.53 pm: Russian fighter jets violated Ukraine's air space, says ministry
KIEV: Russian fighter jets twice violated Ukraine's air space over the Black Sea during the night, Interfax news agency quoted the Defence Ministry as saying on Monday.
It said Ukraine's air force had scrambled a Sukhoi SU-27 interceptor aircraft and prevented any "provocative actions" but gave no further details. - Reuters

4.50 pm: Still not too late for peaceful solution in Ukraine, says Merkel aide

BERLIN: Germany's Angela Merkel believes it is not too late to resolve the Ukrainian crisis by political means despite differences in opinion betweenVladimir Putin and the West on Crimea, which Russia now controls, an aide to the chancellor said on Monday.
Merkel has proposed to the Russian president Putin and U.S. President Barack Obama sending a "fact-finding mission" to the Ukrainian region of Crimea, a peninsula on the Black Sea where Russian forces have seized control without any fighting.
"It is still not to late to resolve this crisis peacefully by political means," said Merkel's spokesman Steffen Seibert, urging Moscow to withdraw "from the logic of troop movements".
"There is no doubt President Putin has a completely different view on the situation and events in Crimea from the German government and our Western partners," he said. - Reuters
A pro-Russian soldier stands by a billboard with a map of Crimea and bearing the words Autonomous Republic of Crimea in the port of Kerch in Ukraine on March 3, 2014. AP/Darko Vojinovic
4.45 pm: UN Chief Will Urge Russia To De-Escalate Ukraine Crisis
Geneva: United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon said on Monday that he would ask Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov that Russia refrain from any acts or rhetoric that would further escalate the crisis in Ukraine and instead seek dialogue with authorities in Kiev.
Ban said that his deputy Jan Eliasson, who had just arrived in Kiev, would "convey the same message to Ukrainian authorities".
"It is now of utmost importance to restore calm and to de-escalate tensions immediately through dialogue," Ban told a news conference in Geneva shortly before holding talks with Lavrov.
"I will urge that the Russian Federation refrain from any acts and rhetoric that could further escalate the situation and instead to engage constructively and through peaceful means with Ukraine." -Reuters

4.30 pm: Russian Foreign Minister Tells West To Put Ukrainian People First
Moscow: Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov on Monday rejected accusations that Russia is acting aggressively toward Ukraine and accused the West of putting its own "geopolitical calculations" ahead of the fate of the people in the former Soviet republic.
At a U.N. human rights meeting in Geneva, Lavrov tried to turn the tables following a hail of Western criticism after President Vladimir Putin secured permission from lawmakers to send the military into Ukraine.
"We call for a responsible approach, to put aside geopolitical calculations, and above all to put the interests of the Ukrainian people first," he said on a live feed broadcast to Moscow.
While the Kremlin says Putin has not decided to send troops into Ukraine, Western states say Russian forces have already taken control of Crimea, a Black Sea peninsula with a Russian majority. -Reuters

Sunday, 2 March 2014

VELAILLA PATTATHARI

VELAILLA PATTATHARI

CAST AND CREW : Dhanush, Amalapaul

DIRECTOR : Velraj

MUSIC COMPOSED BY : Anirudh

PRODUCER : Wunderbar Films pvt ltd

RELEASE DATE : coming soon

DESCRIPTION - PREVIEW : Velailla Pattathari Movie Cast and Crew,Review,Trailer,Reelase Date,Videos | Velailla Pattathari movie based on action and drama,Romance packaged movie. Directed by Velraj. The film stars are Dhanush, Amala Paul and others. The film produced by Wunderbar Films pvt ltd. Music composed by Anirudh, he is the best music director. We knows that Dhanush performance at all, his previous all the films is hit the box office, this film too.Dhanush's 25th of this film.

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Apple's 'iOS in the Car' technology to roll out next

Apple's "iOS in the Car" operating system, which would let drivers access various iPhone functions through a car's built-in screen, is set to head out of the garage next week, says a report.
Ferrari, Mercedes-Benz, and Volvo are the automakers on board for the launch, says the Financial Times, which cited unnamed sources in reporting that the official announcement will take place at the Geneva Motor Show. The FT said neither Apple nor the carmakers would comment.

Beyond smartphones, "the bigger opportunity for Apple and its ecosystem is becoming essential not just for people texting, checking news, watching movies, and playing games, but for massive growth areas such as transportation, home automation, and health care," CNET's Dan Farber
 noted last week, following a report that Apple's head of mergers and acquisitions had met with Elon Musk, CEO of electric-car maker Tesla, in 2013.Apple talked up iOS in the Car at its Worldwide Developers Conference last year, with VP Eddy Cue -- a Ferrari board member -- showing a mock-up of a car's LCD with Apple menu buttons for maps, phone, music, and messaging. Cue said the functions could be accessible via Siri as well. Many cars already include integration with iOS music functions. Cue said Chevrolet, Ferrari, Honda, Jaguar, Mercedes, Nissan, Volvo and others would be introducing iOS integration this year.
Apple's rivals are also aware of those opportunities. The Wall Street Journal reported in December that Google had teamed up with Audi to develop in-car entertainment and information systems based on its Android OS. And, of course, on the home automation front, Google is set to buy Nest for $3.2 billion.

world's largest aircraft can fly for three weeks

Thanks to technology, the world is becoming a darker place.
No, I'm not suggesting that we're becoming less and less enlightened, as we sacrifice our minds to the robots.
Instead, I'm merely indicating that we will soon not be able to see that thing we currently call the sky.
There'll be Jeff Bezos's drones flying around all day, delivering dictionaries and diapers to the distressed. There'll be journalistic drones all around, capturing every aerial detail of multiplecar crashes.
And then there'll be the HAV 304 Airlander, which is so large that it will block the view of several planets as it waddles through the heavens.
I confess I hadn't heard of this plane before the Telegraph told me it was the world's largest aircraft.Indeed, when you look at the promotional video above, it's got massive green credentials, can fly for three weeks, and is a marvelous hybrid of airship, plane, and helicopter.
It's 300 feet long and doesn't need an airport to take off. Yes, if you have a large garden, it can take off from it.

Some might be disturbed, though, by its potential uses. Though it can be used to deliver vast amounts of humanitarian aid, I was moved by the words of Hybrid Air Vehicles' technical director, who says in the video: "You can put 7 or 8 tons of surveillance equipment on board."
It can land on water, sand, or ice.
Honestly, we can never have enough surveillance. What fun to have it being transported in a vehicle the size of Vegas.
Bruce Dickinson, lead singer of metal band Iron Maiden, is one of those involved in this fine project, which has been given 2.5 million British pounds (about $4.2 million) to prepare itself for a maiden flight in the fall.
Some, though, have observed that its rear end resembles, well, a large human rear end.
That would surely be one more discombobulating sight in the skies of the future.
Just so beautiful.

NARENDAR MODI -Authors and able allies

Are these biographies or hagiographies, asks the writer of the latest crop of books on political leaders.

In the year of the general elections, hagiographies seem to be in. Barring occasional rays of hope, authors today increasingly resemble medieval courtiers.
Pick up the latest biography of Narendra Modi, Sudesh Verma’s The Gamechanger and you could be excused for thinking that the Gujarat Chief Minister is the panacea for all the maladies afflicting the nation. The title of Verma’s book, though, seems tame when one comes across D.P. Singh’s Narendra Modi: Yes, He Can… Only He can save India from Impending Doom. The cover leaves no room for speculation. Or try Akhilesh Yadav: Winds of Change by Sunita Aron. Then there isRahul by Jatin Gandhi and Veenu Sandhu that tells us the Gandhi scion is a patient man ready to bide his time for final success. But, Rahul Gandhi being both inaccessible and inscrutable, the husband-wife team had a mountain to climb.
Add other books on our leaders, their economics, their politics and it seems there is no dearth of modern-day Chanakyas! We are spoiled for choice. Some of the books attempt to woo slinking shadows, others prop up individuals squandered in a maze of narcissism. Our media is often accused of being both pliant and given to predilections. But authors? In the season of elections, nobody, it seems, minds a good harvest. And some authors have turned into able allies. They paint their subjects with a halo — men who never sinned, were only sinned against. Alternately, they build a myth around them.
Sample this: On the failed marriage of the Gujarat Chief Minister, Verma writes, “Narendra was able to defend his action by remembering Gautama Buddha. Narendra’s friends recall his explanation in private talks that even Buddha had left his wife, son and all pleasures and luxuries of a royal life in search of Truth….”
And how is this for an anecdote from childhood to embellish the narrative: “Once, Narendra was badly injured when a crocodile hit his left foot with its tail. A croc’s tail is strong; a hit by it can be fatal… Narendra was an eighth grade student then. He got nine stitches on his left foot near the ankle and was bed-ridden for more than a week… This incident would have scared any other child for the rest of his life, but not Narendra. Within a month, he was back in the lake.” Later Verma adds, “While coming back from his swimming routine, he found a baby crocodile lying alone at the side of the lake. It was more than a foot long. ND took the baby croc to his residence to nurse it…”
Verma claims he gleaned these details because of his team of five members. “I took leave for eight months to write the book. I spoke to his relatives, his neighbours. I was privileged enough to meet Modi more than half a dozen times. It changed my perception of him. He was more sinned against.”
Aron, on the other hand, does not attempt to invest Akhilesh with a halo; she gets help from unexpected quarters. Akhilesh, in a direct reference to the much-hailed sultan, was called Tipu in childhood. However, when talking of his birth, Aron cannot resist painting a picture that reminds readers of the birth of Krishna, replete with songs, bhajans and gaiety. Aron writes, “…There was anxiety in the air as a frail Malti Devi moaned with labour pains…The midwife tried to comfort Malti, who was in her early thirties, in a room faintly lit by a lantern. An infant’s first cry around 5.30 a.m. triggered a flurry of activity in the house. An excited midwife announced the birth of a baby boy and triggered celebrations. There were smiles all around and sweets were distributed even as people started pouring in to bless the boy. The sound of dholak reverberated as women with their faces covered in ghunghats sang jachchaand jananas to welcome the new arrival in the family of an ordinary farmer.”
Aron, however, says that she wrote the book like a journalist. “I don’t know how the book is going to be positioned in the election year. It is up to the publishers. It has formally not been released yet as the CM is busy. Incidentally, I found him very reticent in my talks and I spoke to a lot of relatives and others to take the story forward. I used a novel-like narrative, built the story on anecdotes.” But winds of change? “Yes, there are winds of change; there is a generational shift in U.P. politics,” she insists.
Not too different in mood and spirit is Arun Sinha’s Nitish Kumar and the Rise of Bihar. Sinha, a college-time friend of the Bihar CM, writes like a friend too. No uncomfortable questions, no sneak asides.
Then there are others who have revisited a political subject. For instance, veteran M.V. Kamath and Kalindi Randeri with The Man of the Moment: Modi, or Sameer Kochhar withModiNomics. Kamath and his co-author had earlier authored another book on Modi, The Architect of a Modern State.
Many of these works are not easy to read. Their prose is laboured, tainted with pedantry, breathless with stuffiness. Life is not linear; a single-strand narrative cannot render it accurately. These days, as we have discovered, the language of political discourse is both banal and inaccurate.
Some works, when they shift focus from the immediate subject, make interesting reading, like Aarthi Ramachandran’s Decoding Rahul Gandhi, but where is the bravura, that dash of irreverence? Certainly not in Pappu Yadav’s Hindi autobiography, or even Sutanu Guru’s more nuanced Beyond Rahul versus Modi.
However, Nilanjan Mukhopadhyay’s and Kingshuk Nag’s books — Narendra Modi: The Man, the Times and The NaMo Story respectively — are a breath of fresh air. Neither seeks to impart a halo to Modi nor run him down unnecessarily. Mukhopadhyay says, “On Modi there is tremendous polarisation; either you are 150 per cent with him or against him. It is difficult to be nuanced. I was taking a risk of being isolated by either camp. I spoke to Modi many times. Fortunately, there has been a huge response from the market. But, yes, Modi has stopped speaking to me. Probablybecause he found the style offensive as I have taken small jabs at him. No bookstore has had an event in Ahmedabad.”
A Hindi version of the book has been brought out by Yatra and several Malayalam books have borrowed from his biography, but no Marathi or Gujarati publisher has come forward.
Nag did not interview Modi. He says, “You can love him, or hate him, but there is no way that you can ignore Narendra Modi.” Interestingly, Nag had the idea for the book from 2002 but when he approached a publisher, he was advised, “Write a book from the Hindu point of view.” It took another 10 years before a publisher (Roli Books) agreed to a biography that would neither “demonise” nor “lionise” the subject.
Another similar case is Sankarshan Thakur’s well-researched, persuasively-argued book on Nitish Kumar Single Man. Incidentally, Thakur had, much earlier, written about Nitish’s main rival Laloo Prasad Yadav in The Making of Laloo, the Unmaking of Bihar.
These are, however, exceptions in an age keen to rewrite its times.