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6 Reviews
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19 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A great book for non Indians too,
By Julio "juliocuervo" (Buenos Aires, Argentina) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Elephant, The Tiger, and the Cell Phone: Reflections on INDIA - The Emerging 21st-Century Power (Hardcover)
I wanted to know a bit more about Indian culture and Indian history and I love this book. It's so well written. You must have some basic knolwedge of Indian history to understand it though. If you don't know who Nehru was and what the "partition" was you need to read some books before this one.
The book helped me to discover many facets of the Indian culture and society: the importance of secularism (and the current threats), the basic tenets of hinduism, the difference between north and south, the passion for cricket, the odd habit of changing cities' names, the use of the sari (or the lack of use), etc. I strongly recommend this book to anyone who is interested in knowing more about India.
17 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Must read for NRIs,
By New Dad (Aurora, CO United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Elephant, The Tiger, and the Cell Phone: Reflections on INDIA - The Emerging 21st-Century Power (Hardcover)
This book is a must read for Non Resident Indians. Mr. Tharoor has perfectly portrayed India in a way NRIs would manifest their experiences of their home country. Though the book is not targeted only for Indians, it has few historical & personal references that only a true Indian can understand.
The book starts with little bit of Indian history talking about "People who made my India" that includes noted Indians from all sects including politics, cricket & bollywood. The author also provides a glimpse of India's culture (spirituality, traditional family values) & tourism (experiences at Ajanta & Ellora caves, Ayurvedic resort in Kerala) followed by India's progress in this 21st century (call centers, cellphone surge). Since Mr. Tharoor has been associated with the United Nations, the facts about India's growth, outlined in the book, truly suggest that India is the 21st century's emerging power. I really enjoyed the chapter on India's cricket legend, Sunil Gavaskar, who was my hero too when growing up. It is nostalgic the way Mr. Tharoor has written about the "little master". This is a must read for all Indians living outside their own home country.
12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Pleasant Patriotism,
This review is from: The Elephant, The Tiger, and the Cell Phone: Reflections on INDIA - The Emerging 21st-Century Power (Hardcover)
I adore Tharoor's erudite and amusing writing. This book feels like home with its loving description of all that matters - cricket, family, community, cinema, history, religion and politics - in that order. The author's pet theme is the ostensibly unwieldy yet absurdly functional pluralism fed by a range of coalition memberships - geographies, cricket solidarities and common political antipathies.
I love that Tharoor describes his India as an individual experience rather than an objective concept. Tharoor subtly endorses the thumping progressive new Indians with his metaphor of an elephant who became a tiger - suggesting provocatively that the vulgarly ostentatious 'five star culture' is more authentic than the discreet opulence of the club culture. However, his intense nostalgia quite clear in the subtext of every syllable - the longing for the old names Madras and Bombay, the self-conscious diginity of Nehruvian democracy and the portrayal of St. Stephens as a modern Nalanda of sorts! Yet, there is nothing fatalistic or too precious about Tharoor - he denounces superstition and horsocopes and doesn't mind writing that as a man he'd like to see women in elegant saris. It's the sort of nice nationalism that warms one without being too jarring or jingoistic.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Mandatory reading if you want to understand India,
By
This review is from: The Elephant, The Tiger, and the Cell Phone: Reflections on INDIA - The Emerging 21st-Century Power (Hardcover)
The Elephant, the Tiger, and the Cell Phone, The: The Emerging 21st-
Century Power, Shashi Tharoor - We Indians are often so starved for some metric -- any metric, really -- of validation that we blindly embrace Indians of all stripes residing outside India. What else could explain our head-long rush to claim Bobby Jindal as one of our own while demonstrating obvious restraint for Mr. Shashi Tharoor? (For those readers who may not know Mr. Jindal, he is the Indian-American governor of the US state of Louisiana.) Unarguably, and just as unfortunately, present the names of Mr. Jindal and Mr. Tharoor to any Indian in the US and the chances are better than even that they have pride in Mr. Jindal while drawing blanks when Mr. Tharoor's name is mentioned. This is an egregious sin, for Mr. Tharoor revels in being an Indian as much as Mr. Jindal repudiates it. This revelry in all things Indian is evident in Mr. Tharoor's latest book. He staunchly believes and defends the Indian notion of secularism, which he maintains is not the absence of any religion, but the proliferation of many religions, all equally protected under the constitution (a point he makes in other books as well, most notably in India: from midnight to the millennium). Going further, he makes the point that where else can you find a political landscape so diverse that in the 2004 Indian elections, a Sikh (Manmohan Singh), representing a Congress party headed by a Catholic (Sonia Gandhi), was sworn in as prime minister by a Muslim president (A.P.J. Abdul Kalam)! It is certainly hard to argue against that now, isn't it? The book is great reading. Besides the weighty issues of politics, religion, constitution, and culture, Mr. Tharoor also makes detours to cover the light-hearted issues of ever-changing city names in India (Bombay becomes Mumbai, etc.), and the desire to add extra consonants and vowels in soap operas because the producers believe that this extra letter will certainly and undoubtedly lend an air of success to the endeavor! Oh, did I mention the fascination that Indians have with cricket? Any student of modern India -- be it in the political arena or cultural one -- can ill afford to eschew the ruminations of Mr. Tharoor. My advice: if you are Indian and really want to be proud of it, read Mr. Tharoor and leave Mr. Jindal to his devices.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A excellent book about India by an Indian not just for Indians,
This review is from: The Elephant, The Tiger, and the Cell Phone: Reflections on INDIA - The Emerging 21st-Century Power (Hardcover)
Shashi Tharoor has presented an objective analyses of India by discussing its strengths and weaknesses in a wonderfully endearing manner, that makes this book a great read.
I especially liked the preface where he summarizes the world-view about India as a lumbering elephant that lorded over the jungle in the distant past, but is now superseded by tigers and other animals that were quicker to change. The preface concludes with an observation that the rest of the jungle now sees the elephant growing stripes and acquiring a spring in its steps. Only time (or his next book) will tell us whether the transformation of the elephant into the tiger is here to stay or not. I, for one, am itching to know!!!
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent book on Modern Day India,
By Indian Literature Fan ""Sayo"" (MN,USA) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Elephant, The Tiger, and the Cell Phone: Reflections on INDIA - The Emerging 21st-Century Power (Hardcover)
I thoroughly enjoyed reading Shashi Tharur's well-rounded analysis of various issues in Modern India. A must-read for non-resident as well as resident Indians !!!
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The Elephant, The Tiger, and the Cell Phone: Reflections on INDIA - The Emerging 21st-Century Power by Shashi Tharoor (Hardcover - September 19, 2007)
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