Monday, January 12, 2009

Keep Off The Grass by Karan Bajaj


I had read many serious books lately and thought I could take a break. That’s when Keep Off The Grass by Karan Bajaj came into the picture.
Brought for me again by a friend who had this time read it himself and recommended the book as a great fun read. So I decided to give it a shot.
(Even though I thought I was done for life with the books written by the IIT/IIM types. Nothing wrong with the books though, in fact I really liked some of them specially Earning The Laundry Stripes by Manreet Sodhi Someshwar. But the decision was just that - a decision based on wanting to read a book that came out of a mind that doesn’t produce twirling
tales of action that resulted due to suffocation by the trivialities of the rigorous IIT/IIM routines or because they just weren’t doing well at the course and had lots of time to smoke up, get wasted and write books. I mean, of course they all know what they are in for before taking admission there but still they enter and then they whine and struggle and whine more about it through their books. And publishers line up at their doorsteps and then people like us have to read those melodramatic almost the same sounding accounts of the ultra competitive rat race in their books just because some IIM graduate has written it.. oh c’mon! I thought I was done with that)
Book Review: Keep Off The Grass
A refreshing account of the escapades of an 'ABCD' Wall Street investment banker who quits his job, leaves his country and comes back to India to join the IIM in search of his roots and who he is within. Sure enough life as he finds it is not only very different but also difficult at IIM along with being a complete contrast from his high achieving spell at Yale. Throughout the process of breaking through within himself the protagonist makes friends and brushes past various incidents with aghorees at the ghats of Banares, auto rickshaw drivers doubling up as pimps and drug peddlers, the predictably corrupt cops and earnest promoters of Vipaasana in the Himalayas to being locked in a prison cell, knocking on Ruskin Bond’s door and anecdotes about many other lesser lives trudging along towards the grades glory at the IIMB. The incidents are witty, surreal and in a funny and strange way all credible.
The fast paced nature of the book takes you through a humorous joyride with a hint of mellow excitement as the author delves deeper into contact with his real self.
Keep Off The Grass by debutant novelist Karan Bajaj is available at leading bookstores for Rs 195/-

2 comments:

  1. babes!! i love it!!!!! Extremely well-written!!!
    Keep it up!!!
    luk forward to more musings frm ur side!!

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  2. kya baat.. someone turning a book critic.. nice!

    ReplyDelete