Intoxication prose in search of human connection: a London novel

Booker-shortlisted writer, Michele Roberts’s latest 14th novel, pays homage to all London’s streetwalkers and literal writer from the likes of Dickens, Woolf. In 1851 Joseph Benson is hired by journalist and social reformer Henry Mayhew, to research for his groundbreaking newspaper articles about the working classes that will later form his magnum opus, London Labour…

Our economy may have recovered from recession but not our economics

Whenever there is a financial crisis, Economists does a  forensics and post-mortem of past financial crises to discover the clues as to how the next one might occur and what you can learn from them. In the latest book by former Securities and Exchange Commission regulator and Treasury department advisor Richard Bookstabe, reveals how the…

Empire strikes back: British struggle for Imperial identity

Stuart Hall catalogues his experiences that shaped his intellectual, political and theoretical work in his new book said: “ Sometimes I feel myself to have been the last colonial”. Stuart Hall an immigrant intellectual,  one of the most prominent and influential scholars, and public intellectual of his generation, who is well placed as outsiders insiders,…

Raghu Rai’s latest book celebrates life of Saint Teresa

   In 1928, when Mother Teresa was only eighteen, Gonxha Agnes Bojaxhiu joined the Sisters of Loreto, an Irish community of nuns with missions in India. From 1931 to 1948, Mother Teresa taught in  Calcutta, the suffering and poverty she glimpsed outside the convent made such deep impressions on her that in 1948 she received…

Superfast ultimate nation: Modern India

Adam Roberts spent five years travelling from Kashmir to Kanyakumari, Bengal to Gujarat and encountered power brokers, multi-billionaires farmers, tech innovators, prime ministers, travelling salesmen, pilgrims from the world’s largest democracy and he asked them how India can become a truly great economic power, more influential abroad and stable at home. Through his book he…

How China ended Western domination

Chinese President Xi Jinping visited history museum in Beijing that surveyed the foreign abuses beginning with opium wars before moving to glories of “New China” and the “reform and opening up” post-Mao Zedong’s death, that created the world’s second- largest economy. He said: “In my view to realise the great renewal of the Chinese nation…

Always Connected generation

  Sociologist, Donna Freitas after interviewing 200 students from 13 US colleges about their social media addictions, writes in her latest book, “Students express near universal adoration of Snapchat. They can say dumb things, and take goofy, ugly photographs and parade them to other people, and can be sad, mean and negative.” Social media has…

Effects of misguided financial regulations

Business journalist William Cohan asks if the regulatory body go too far in response to the 2008 financial crisis on the US financial sector, especially the Dodd-Frank Act which limited Wall Street’s ability to serve its customers. Enhanced capital requirements and compliance burdens are crippling the supply of credit to consumers and businesses and thwarting…

Orwell’s Nose a beacon of light in modern world

What would George Orwell make of the series of conflicts entirely bloodless between American President Donald Trump and the sections of the American media and the so-called “Fake news”. In Nineteen Eighty-Four, George Orwell expressed in one of his images, that of the whale and you could understand the society or the world being swallowed…

Myths about men and women

Cordelia’s new book “ Testosterone Rex”, explains men and women’s investment in their off-spring was fundamentally unequal, hence they need different approaches to reproductive success,  as the sexes evolved different kinds of brains and desperate natures, with men being more promiscuous, risk-taking and competitive, and women more caring and nurturing. Testosterone are produced for male…