1. The Battle of the Labyrinth & The Last Olympian (#4 and #5 of Percy Jackson and the Olympians) -
The series gets constantly boring for me, though I know it's mostly my fault for not being a teenager. Sorry guv, I grew up even though I really didn't want to. The end is predictable like with most Young Adult series but the journey is kinda fun if you focus constantly on the mythology stuff and pretend not to read the teenager-y conversations between the characters. Oh I loved Mrs. O'Leary ("woof!"). And Hermes. And George+Martha on his caduceus. And Grover when he's nervous. And Blackjack's lingo. For all its adventure, Percy Jackson series could have used a bit of fun, as the target audience is YA. I felt that was a glaring miss from Rick Riordan. Not enough female characters on whom I managed to get a crush on - Annabeth, Zoe, Thalia, Rachel, Silena were all meh. Rating: 3/5
2. The Lost Hero and The Son of Neptune (#1 and #2 of Heroes of Olympus series) -
When the Last Olympian ended with yet another prophecy, this time concerning seven demi-gods, I knew we were in for another series. So here goes another 5 books of which the first two deal exclusively with the Roman mythology as much as the earlier series dealt with Greek. I knew about Remus, Romulus and Lupa before I read this series (thanks to AS Roma). Huzzah! Lost Hero was tolerable only for Leo Valdez and Festus. Son of Neptune is where I lost my patience as it gets waaayyyy too emotional teenager-y. My sis lamented last night "I should have picked up LOTR 11 yrs earlier but I thought it would be too dark and it would be too long but now that I've finally read it, it's bestest fantasy series eva!". Of course even if I'd read Percy Jackson series when I was 14, I doubt I'd have it ranked among the best fantasy series - as impressionable as I was at that time. But it's an alright series, not bad considering all the mythology stuff. There are occasions when I mutter "shut up you stupid girl" but Piper, Hazel, Reyna, Annabeth and all would grow up one day. Leo was fun in the first book but his fun quotient keeps going down. At least we still have Coach Hedge who probably fits the meme "all your base are belong to us" better than anyone. Rating: 3/5 (mostly for great mythology stories).
3. Ganapathi by Chilakamarthi Lakshmi Narasimham -
Re-read my review of Gurajada Apparao's Kanyasulkam, reduce the rating by 1, add the parts - "what's the point of this?", "nope, this is too low even for me", "c'mon, this is stupid", "it's not even funny anymore!". Rating: 3/5
4. The Runaway Jury by John Grisham -
The only other Grisham I read was the real life account The Innocent Man, which was very touching and also had its moments of thrill. This book concerns a jury for one of the stand out cases in the modern US history (fictional) which deals with the anti-smoking laws, the smoking companies lobbying, how a jury can be swayed, etc. From around 100th page onwards, it meandered to a predictable ending and though I was impressed with all the statistics, surveys, arguments, counter-arguments, opinions et al both in favor and against smoking companies and their advertising, it felt a little flat in the story telling department. But I kinda liked it though. Rating: 3/5
5. Padava Munaka by Kamalasanudu, a translation of Rabindranath Tagore's Nouka dubi -
I was involved in a discussion recently about books that are translated - whether they help in bringing newer and unfamiliar audience to stories (of course they do) and whether they can keep the beauty of the original intact (some do, some don't). This book concerns with a Law graduate who is in love with one girl (sister of his close friend) but has to marry another girl to respect his father's wishes. The story picks up when the procession carrying the couple over the river on the way back from the wedding to Kolkata capsizes. It is a beautifully written story with a very endearing language and even though I know Tagore's original work is definitely greater, but I can still say that I'd loved the Telugu version too. There were a couple of occasions when it felt like the Bengali phrase was poorly/literally translated and this can be observed even by someone like moi whose Bengali is limited to ami tumi bhalobashi. But of course these mistakes don't take away the effort put in bringing the rest of the story closer to Telugu audience. I heard there's an English translation called The Wreck though I don't know if Gurudev himself wrote it. Rating: 4/5
6. Dreamcatcher by Stephen King -
While reading this book, I constantly thought of King's Hemingway Defense. Was King drunk when he wrote this? Was he high? Was he dreaming? The story is about four childhood friends and their special buddy who "can see the line". I keep turning page after page of King's books and I wonder how he manages to write sooo much! On a typical sunday afternoon, I struggle to write anything coherent and ingenius for more than 2 pages. So yeah, kudos for that special ability. I can't help but wonder if his books can be reduced by nearly 200 pages without losing any major incident in his story. Of course, The Shining doesn't come under this - every page is awe-freakin-some. But Dreamcatcher - I don't know, it felt unnecessarily too long. It has aliens and stuff, so maybe King got drunk while watching ET and then found himself a lot of free time. It has a few gross scenes too. Do not read certain parts after heavy lunch and obviously stay away from this book after dinner. Rating: 3/5
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