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Film, forest, sun

3 NEW RELEASES

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Our Bureau New Delhi
BOLLYWORLD: POPULAR INDIAN CINEMA THROUGH A TRANSNATIONAL LENS
Edited by Raminder Kaur and Ajay J Sinha
Sage Publications
 
This is a sometimes over-didactic but generally compelling collection of essays about the relationship between popular Indian cinema and shifting global dynamics over the decades.
 
Highlights include: "Not Quite (Pearl) White: Fearless Nadia, Queen of the Stunts", which contrasts the screen persona of the feisty action star Nadia with that of the aristocratic, cosmopolitan Devika Rani; and "The Consumable Hero of Globalised India", about the changes in the Bollywood leading man in the post-liberalisation era. ("To the extent that liberalisation itself is a relatively recent phenomenon, having been set in place only in 1991, the consumable hero has no history. His class acquired jobs with perks, high disposable incomes, a jet-setting lifestyle and shopping holidays overseas only from the mid-1990s or so.")
 
Most of the essays constitute thoughtful, intelligent writing about topics there still isn't enough literature on. Contributors include Rosie Thomas, Gayatri Chatterjee and Shuddhabrata Sengupta.
 
FOREST OF THE PYGMIES
by Isabel Allende
(translated by Margaret Sayers Peden)
Harper Collins
 
This is the final instalment of the adventure trilogy that began with City of the Beasts and continued with Kingdom of the Golden Dragon.
 
Eighteen-year-old Alexander Cold and his friend Nadia Santos travel to Africa on a new International Geographic expedition with Alexander's tough grandma Kate.
 
When they agree to aid a Catholic missionary, they find themselves facing off against a savage tyrant and must now turn to their totemic animal spirits, Jaguar and Eagle, for help. The versatile Chilean author brings her vivid descriptive style to this genre.
 
THE YEAR BEFORE SUNSET: A NOVEL
by Hugh & Colleen Gantzer
Penguin Books India
 
Set in 1946, in the British Empire's last year in India, this a story told through the eyes of 16-year-old Phillip Brandon, spending his winter vacations in the sleepy town of Lakhbagan, and confronting his doubts and fears about his future in the soon-to-be independent India.
 
Phillip's life, marked by boisterous parties, furtive dates and shooting expeditions, is at variance with the general turmoil in the country. But trouble lurks around the corner as mysterious characters and events cast a shadow on the tranquillity of Lakhbagan.
 
This is a perceptive look at the issues facing the Anglo-Indian community at a crucial time in the country's history.

 
 

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First Published: May 28 2005 | 12:00 AM IST

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