A Games of Thrones – George R. R. Martin
// February 5th, 2010 // No Comments » // books, review
I believe it was 3 years ago that I bumped into SG at one of our favourite joints in St. Louis – UCPL. And while I was flipping through the foreign film section to find a Wooster and Jeeves DVD he pulled me to the sci-fi and fantasy section and thrust this book into my hands and the started ranting about it. And I checked it out and read two pages and then forgot about it. I wish I hadn’t, I wish I had read all the books in the A Song of Ice and Fire series then, when I had more time. When I did not think that reading fantasy fiction was a total waste of time. But I could not keep this one down.
Its set in medieval Europe stylised world, where the land is divided into seven kingdoms brought under the rule of a feudal family after an uprising that partially obliterated the previous rulers of the land. The socio-political system of the land is the richest facet of the narrative. The society, styles and mannerisms are medieval European but the political machinations are more akin to Japanese feudal systems with houses similar to hans and the head of a house equivalent to a daimyo and bannersmen similar to faithful retainers.
There is no sole protagonist, rather the story unfolds from the perspective of different characters. This is not a novel about a knight in shining armour who is always a breath away from certain death but survives ferocious monsters and unimaginative-yet-moderately-cunning siblings to win the hand of the fairest bimbo in the land. Here characters are born, they evolve and as soon as you start to admire or hate them they die. The story unfolds a breath taking speed leaving behind favourite characters and elaborating every strand of this epic into a vivid and enrapturing tale. To summarise the plot I fear would be unjust and unwise.
Only I should warn you that this series is incomplete. The last three books of this saga have not been published nor there is little hope that they will be. None the less, the book is worth reading. And I too have involuntarily joined this cult of George Martin fans who make a weekly virtual pilgrimage to his site hoping to find that the remaining books have been written.


Plaza Las Americas, San Juan, Puerto Rico.

A plague strikes a small 
This is an odd entry, i admit. I think its got to do with my sudden respect found for design. Vespa, its an ICON of style. Its the most known automobile on the planet. So its a coffee-table book. This is a series of photographs about the rise & fame of Vespa. There are a few interesting anecdotes. Theres something so simple yet compelling in the design of a Vespa that its original design & shape has hardly gone through any change. Vespa has been sonorous with reliability, style & ease. There also a few pics that this machine to another plane – a cultural phenomenon. There are also bits of the car that spun out of this design. Yeah, I didnt know that either. Theres a sense of peace when looking at people riding a small two wheeler with a tiny engine in gray scale. A simpler time. A provincial life.
I have now read every book written by William Dalrymple and this is the best. Its not that I havent read something written by him for a while, since I just read In the Shadow. But this one is awesome. I admit that Dalrymple knows how to research but this exquisite. Whatever I have read earlier about the
This is a continuum of my 

