Thursday, March 14, 2024

The Truth about CAA 2019

 



Too much noise covers the truth. Would you like to know about the truth of the Citizenship Amendment Act, 2019 of India?

The Citizenship Amendment Act, 2019 is controversial. The amendments made to the Citizenship Act, 1955 in 2019 has made the matter of citizenship of India more valuable than ever. The act has been put to trial.

The trial made the implementation of the law almost impossible. The noise of arguments if the law has violated the constitutional provisions, has been clouded with opinions and uninformed opinions. Can Citizenship Amendment Act, 2019 withstand the trial at court of law as well as the trials of opinion?

If you are looking forward to dazzle in current affairs papers in the civil services examinations, if you are caught in between citizenship of India and another country, if you are looking forward to get back your Indian Citizenship, if you are curious to know how to find your ancestors in legacy data, if you are trying to fathom what is CAA, 2019 and refusing to stay confused by the brouhaha in the media, then this books is a must read for you. 

BUY NOW to get into the details of citizenship laws in India.

https://www.amazon.in/dp/B09875SJF8


Wednesday, March 13, 2024

What Is in My Book about CAA 2019?

 Too many confusing questions around 2019 amendments of the Citizenship Act? Find simple and straight answers in this one stop answer bank.



The objective of this book is to help readers understand the law on Indian Citizenship by untangling complex phrases of bare acts. Understanding the law may further help in distinguishing between information and misinformation in an environment which is clouded with uninformed opinion.
It can also help build informed opinions.

  • This Book can come in handy for the aspirants of examinations for different public services.

  • It can also be helpful to those who are in between citizenships of India and other countries and looking forward to obtaining an Overseas Citizen of India Card.

  • It can also be a guiding material to those who have somehow lost citizenship of India and seeking a way to acquire it.

  • It can also be a guide to finding one’s ancestor in the Legacy Data if Nationwide NRC is ever notified.

  • It can be entertaining to the curious souls who have an urge to understand what citizenship of India is beyond brouhaha in the media.

It is a multipurpose book. It aspires to cater to multitudes of needs and various interests.

This book is a quest to find the definition of Indian Citizen through the statutes.

  1. It has started with the Constitution of India.

  2. It has searched through the provisions of the Citizenship Act, 1955, as amended.

  3. It has studied the Citizenship (Registration of Citizens and Issue of National Identity Cards) Rules, 2003.

  4. It has apprised the processes of National Register for Indian Citizens followed in Assam.

  5. In the end, it has looked into the debate over the Citizenship (Amendment) Act, 2019.

  6. In due course it has made observations about the history of amendments of the Citizenship Act, 1955.

It has noted the points of debate over the latest amendments of the aforementioned act. Yet, it abstained from expressing any opinion.

Why be littered with a plethora of uninformed opinions? Get your facts straight. Make informed decisions.
Buy Now: https://www.amazon.in/dp/B09875SJF8





Tuesday, March 12, 2024

My Book on Indian CAA 2019

 I names my book Indian Citizenship Decoded. I published it on August, 2021 through Amazon's Kindle Direct Publishing. 

Here's the cover:



This book is an apolitical author's break-down of the law.

The book is available here: https://www.amazon.in/dp/B09875SJF8

Saturday, February 24, 2024

Fandom - for a Drama and an Actor

     

   


In the morning of February 10, 2024 I stumbled upon Hindi dubbing of the first episode of Once We Get Married (OWGM). It was uploaded the previous evening around 5:00 PM Indian Standard time on February 09, 2024. I have a feeling that it is going to be a wildfire. Because it is real dubbing with real people exuding nuances of emotions unlike English Dubbing of The Love You Gave Me which sounds robotic because of the use of AI enabled English speaking over the voices of real actors that failed to exude the nuances of emotions.

    I have watched OWGM and its numerous clips with or without English subtitles almost over a thousand times in the past months. Because it is a perfect bedtime story to relax nerves. It is light and funny. Even romantic situations are too funny. The unrealistic part of the story never overshadows the real conflicts and their witty presentation.

    First three times I watched it to find out which characters were played by Wang Yuwen and Wang Ziqi. Before OWGM I have watched them in The Love You Gave Me. I thought that as The Love You Gave Me was trending then, the channel had put another show with hashtags of the names of the stars of the trending show to gain some views for the older forgotten show. [My bad. Apologies. 😵‍]  

I told my husband about the clever trick of the channel, he sneered and said, “Your eyes are not accustomed to identify actors from China.”

    Husbands, including mine, as always, were wrong. Because I could identify the actor who played Dr. Pu in The Love You Gave Me, also played Yin Zecheng, father of Yin Sichen, in OWGM. Director Lee of the orphanage at Shia’n Town in The Love You Gave Me and Song Ma in OWGM were played by the same actor and Wen Ran of My Little Happiness and Dr. Zhou Ruji of The Love You Gave Me were played by the same actor. Wen Shaoqing of My Little Happiness, Yu Daluo of Chase the Truth (CtT), Jian Ge of Bright Eyes in the Dark (BEitD) were played by the same actor. Also, many actors in CtT and BEitD are common like Zhang Jin (Duan Quing, Yu Qilei), Yang Shu (Dr. Mu, Mi Lan), Fu Cheng Peng (Zhou Ji, Station Master Peng) Xu Hong Hao (Pei Yin, Han Bei Yao), Zhou Hui Lin (Jiang Jiu Ping, Lin Qing Yuan) Zhao Xun (Sha Xiao Fei, Xu Jian Fei) and might be many more. How could I not identify which characters were played by Wang Yuwen and Wang Ziqi?

    After watching many more times, from the faces of Gu Xixi on the bridge, between the Amusement Park and the Prairies and of Min Hui drenched in the fountains, it occurred to me that both the characters were played by Wang Yuwen. After watching a few more times, from the faces of Yin Sichen reading Gu Xixi’s Business Plan while Xixi was asleep on the table and of younger Xin Qi of five years ago serving breakfast to younger Min Hui, I found that the actors of the two characters are the same person. 

    I stumbled upon a video of Wang Ziqi Fan Club (International) on YouTube where Mr. Wang was roaming around the markets in Changjin and he was requested to take a photo with Yin Sichen on TV in a shop. I paused the video and showed the frame to my husband. He said that the person on the TV screen and the person standing in front of the TV could not be the same person!

    I can name a few actors who had the same visual effect on viewers - Toshiro Mifune, Samuel L Jackson, Daniel Day-Lewis, Javier Bardem, Keely Hawes, Mathew McFadyen, Allu Arjun, Vickey Kaushal, Wang Yuwen and sometimes Ben Kinglsey and Nawazuddin Siddique.

    Once We Get Married had several pinning scenes like old Bollywood (Hindi) movies which later were considered to be objectionable for various reasons [😯]. But in Once We Get Married the pinned females always came out strong by protesting the act of pinning her, retaliating the pinning, breaking the act of pining and so on without breaking the comical appeal of the situation. Even male actors were pinned sometimes, yet the situation appeared funny.

    Once We Get Married is special because of its details. As a viewer I could never miss the way Mo Zixin notices how Xixi pulls Sichen’s fingers when they were talking about Presidents as Store Ambassadors, or how Fei Ang was witnessing the development of a relationship between Xixi and Sichen, or the background conversations in the parties and in the restaurants.

The wonderful performances will always be remembered by the fans. 

    Here’s a video on birthday of one of the favorite actors Wang Ziqi : 

https://youtu.be/CONb50Q7zCw 


Monday, September 18, 2023

The Drama Series And the Book The Love You Give Me (You Give Me Like) By Shi Ding Rou #Cdrama #WangZiqi #WangYuwen

The Love You Give Me (You Give Me Like)

[你给 我的喜欢]

[Nǐ gěi wǒ de xǐhuān]
by 
Shi Ding Rou (Shi Dingrou) 
An Intimate Insight of a Heart Pounding and a Heart Warming Story


Blurb:

Min Hui fell in love with Xin Qi, but Xin Qi’s heart was set on Su Tian. Can Min Hui ever be able to win Xin Qi’s love?

Min Hui was a very intelligent computer programmer with a Master's degree from the best university in China. After Min Hui started working, she slipped into a wave of tragedy beginning with sexual harassment at workplace leading to loss of her professional future, followed by loss of family completed with her mother’s death. With nowhere to go, no one to turn to, she tried to kill herself.

Li Chun Miao, a co-passenger on Min Hui’s supposedly last bus trip of lifetime, saved her life but lost her own. The shock, trauma, guilt chased Min Hui to mourn Li Chun Miao and fulfill Li Chun Miao’s duties for her brother Chen Jia Jun and promises to her lover Xin Qi, till Min Hui became Su Tian, soul of Li Chun Miao. Can Xin Qi recognize Min Hui’s sacrifices and love her back?

The Love You Give Me, is a contemporary romance with occidental elements of billionaire domineering boss, second chance and haters (enemies) to lovers romance stories and with oriental romance elements of stories of Shakuntala and Shree Radha. If you like an intense love story woven with minute details of the lives of migrant working girls of high paying skill and knowledge industry to low paying unskilled labor sector, then The Love You Give me is a book that you should not miss.

Read Now at https://www.wattpad.com/story/339826405-the-love-you-give-me-you-give-me-like

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

I was trying to beat sleepless nights with audio novels. The autoplay on YouTube dragged me to movie recaps. Movie recaps introduced me to k-dramas. While searching for K-dramas on YouTube, I stumbled upon C dramas. Most C-dramas I abandon after watching for five to fifteen minutes. The one I could not abandon is The Love You Give Me.

The series is available here: 


After watching the first two episodes back to back, I was very much affected by the careful penmanship of the writer of the show. At the beginning of the third episode, I followed the title cards and noted that the series was based on the novel of the same name by Shi Ding Rou. I started searching for an English translation of the book and got only a Wattapad book translated by Google Translator. 

Yes, the poignant idioms were lost in translation. Even then, in the end, I have fallen under the spell of the very realistic contemporary romance that might last for centuries for its quality as a vivid record of life of the people of a country over thirty years since nineteen ninety.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The book starts with Min Hui’s sadness on a bus trip and her chance meeting with Li Chun Miao on the same bus. At the night stop, the two girls shared the room rented by Min Hui. Li Chun Miao was keen on knowing Min Hui. Min Hui was fierce about guarding her privacy. They were way different with respect to their respective physical and mental skills. Yet, at the age of twenty-five, they were both the same, lonely creatures without family and being  bullied, abused and sexually harassed at their respective workplaces.

Li Chun Miao had hopes of meeting her long separated brother and lover, but Min Hui had no such hope. Li Chun Miao’s hopes inspired her to stay positive in her very bleak life and look out for people around her. Min Hui had no reason to believe anymore in human relationships at that point of her life which turned darker than the black holes. Yet she was generous to offer a bed to Li Chun Miao free of cost and gave her a gift of a bracelet that she kept as her father’s memory. Thus, both of them had the soul of Su Tian.

The book gave a Xin Qi who was very sincere and tender to his son and could find innovative ways to complement the duties of the mother of his son. But Xin Qi was also a thousand times more condescending compared to Darcy and a million times more cruel than Heathcliff. He comes in sheep skin and he leaves with wolves' claws smudged with blood of his victim. At some chapters when Min Hui was with Xin Qi, I had to turn off the screen of the reader, from time to time. Because I felt deeply dejected by Xin Qi’s attitude towards Min Hui in those pages. Thus, there lies the mastery of the author. She succeeded in making my heart bleed even through a lopsided English translation of the very vivid book.

The book is candid about the oppressive social policies of the country where birth registration of the children of the single parents costs a hundred times more money compared to that of the children of the married couple. By making laws and framing government policies, the society in the country encouraged citizens to get married to obtain family housing at a reasonable price. The book not only spoke of discrimination in the corporate world but also in the society as a whole. Along with the urban cozy lifestyle of the developing urban centers, the book also narrates the dark dirty standard of living a little further from the urban centers. Thus, the book becomes a confession and a historic record of the time when its narration occurs.

The characters are complex, conflicted, confused by the life events and people around them. Even though Zhau Ru Ji could see Xin Qi’s love for Min Hui, Min Hui was too scared to pamper her feelings for Xin Qi as Xin Qi denied having any relationship with her. To her, Xin Qi was like the pet porcupine which looks adorable from a distance but it stings if touched.

On the other hand Xin Qi seems to be mortified by his guilt. He promised Su Tian a home, a family and a lifetime of love. Yet he ended up falling for Min Hui. His feelings for the person in front of him were so strong that he failed to notice that Min Hui could never be Su Tian as Su Tain was an ace swimmer and Min Hui’s disease does not allow her to swim at all. He failed to suspect the intellect of Min Hui which was far superior than that of Su Tian whom he knew all those years ago. He was confident about his own intellect, yet his mind never signaled him that his myopia never let him see how Su Tian looked in reality and that he could end up believing any woman being Su Tian. The flaws in his own judgment, made him furious and he kept pouring the anger on Min Hui from the pain of guilt and surprise, “How could he cheat on Su Tian and love Min Hui?”

Even though Xin Qi investigated Min Hui, side by side, while searching for Su Tian and investigating disappearance of Su Tian and though he realized that Cheng Qi Rang drove Min Hui to the point of death that dragged Li Chun Miao, Xin Qi’s Su Tian, into Min Hui’s life and sucked Min Hui in the world of Su Tian and Xin Qi, yet he refused to accept the circumstances of Min Hui and show her some mercy. Sexual harassment brings severe hormonal imbalances  in the body of the victim and hence, as a consequence, emotional turbulences along with depression. Min Hui was going through the horror of being touched inappropriately, all alone. As she tried to fight her violator, she lost friends. Her defeat of the legal battles drained all the money her mother had and her mother died of breast cancer as after fighting the legal battle, Min Hui and her mother had no money to put in the treatment of Min Hui’s mother’s ailments. This matter killed Min Hui’s soul. Knowing all Min Hui’s sufferings, did not make Xin Qi a beat considerate of Min Hui’s endeavors to save Xin Qi’s fragile life from the shock of facing the tragic truth of Su Tian’s demise. Rather, Chen Jia Jun seemed more humane without knowing what Min Hui must have gone through.

While reading the book, the information about heart conditions due to illness in Mitral Valve, the information about oncology and breast cancer, the Artificial Intelligence and possibilities of using AI in the medical field were so detailed yet smooth that I found them very engaging and very real. Same are the narrations about the finance market, hostile takeovers of companies, toxic corporate culture, laws of the land and how these things affect lives of people. Careful research and meticulous literary construction, made the book store page after page of contemporary reality of the social, professional, financial and all important aspects of life.

I liked the book more than the series. In the series, Min Hui’s decision of not going for an abortion of her child, have been pinned to compulsion of the life threat of Min Hui on the process of abortion. The book did not try to justify Min Hui’s decision of keeping her child alive and giving birth. All I could imagine is that the reason Min Hui gave birth to her son must be Min Hui’s craving for having a family of her own after losing her birth family to death.

The series made Min Hui’s character rather fickle compared to her otherwise gritty nature. Also, the drama series did not give Min Hui the necessary character arc. How Min Hui became a single mother of Su Quan or Min Quanquan with great career success, even though she did not have a supportive mother at home and her father was not there to play with her son at her home remained a mystery even after the end of the series.

It was not clear at all why Min Hui looked so depressed while meeting Xin Qi five years ago - was it due to the trauma of the bus accident or was it because something that happened much earlier. In the drama, Xin Qi was much more likable than the Xin Qi in the book. In the whole series, the character of Xin Qi, was whitened and diluted by eliminating the complexes, complications, confusions and conflicts. Xin Qi is not as ruthless in the drama series as in the book.

The drama took a bit of negativity from Xin Qi of the book and painted it on Chen Jia Jun. But, by all logic,  in the book, Chen Jia Jun was overwhelmed by the generosity and sincere love of Min Hui and he tried to establish himself as Min Hui’s brother. The drama series missed this logical point as Min Hui’s proposal to become Chen Jia Jun’s elder sister was all talk but no action. The ending in the book was also a surprise and held me back to the screen of the reader, unlike the ending of the  drama series.

The drama has sugar coated everything and showed the existence in a glossy manner. But the book was an account of the real world that often stinks and often soothes with pleasant odors. The drama is a lot of “look good, feel good” type presentation while the book was harsh reality at every word.

However, as I would be flipping through the book every now and then, I would also keep watching a scene here and another scene there between Xin Qi and Min Quanqun, especially in the early episodes.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Let me know what is your take in the comments.



Monday, December 19, 2022

40 Plus Fantasy Books

 



 Slaying the Sovereign and its predecesor Rescuing the Realm are in  a book funnel promo. 

Here is the link: https://books.bookfunnel.com/myths-fairytales-sale/gbum212e02

I would love to hear from you. Please speak your mind in the comment section.

Friday, December 9, 2022

Pride And Prejudice - A Ramble

 


Oh, Dear Lord! How did I miss the pungent sarcasm in the opening sentence of the novel!

In my early twenties, when frivolity was fashionable, I did not like the story in Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice. I (with my prejudices against soap opera and pride of reading cerebral fiction) thought, “Blah, overused tropes of soap operas.” After twenty something more springs, battling with sleep hazards, I chose the audio book format of Pride and Prejudice so that I could fall asleep soon from the boredom of listening to it.

After finishing the book, reading (the Story Classics Video is in a wonderful format of read along listening) a few chapters twice, sometimes thrice or more, I have finished the book in two consecutive days and nights (listening to the book and reading it whenever I am not speaking, writing or reading anything else). Ten hours thirty minutes and thirty some seconds of the total length of the video was quite reassuring that I would sleep well for more than a month. Even after my repetitive reading of a few chapters, the solace of reading the book for over a month has gone. [That’s what I thought after finishing the book in a go.]

While reading I was smiling. Two decades ago the verbiage of the novel seemed boisterous, condescending, and conceited (I mean that the words in the book were taxing and preparatory for SAT, Civil Service Examinations, CAT and GRE). Now, I feel that the semantics made the prose succinct, and the syntax made the reading sweet yet crisp and poignant (I mean that the prose is bodacious).

The story was known. The plot points were too familiar. Even then I kept reading the book, choosing a chapter in the middle, a chapter in the end, a chapter in the beginning, ignoring the plot development and logical (or illogical) coherence of the narration, as if the book was the brook of clear water quenching my thirst for literary aesthetics. The world building, the imageries, the narrative - everything is a superb mastery of prose and balance of dark and bright sides of lives, the balance of dry sarcastic humor on the society and comical caricatures of the society (the very basic aspects of society that did not change with any paradigm shift from drawing room assemblies or ballrooms to Facebook and FaceTime).

I would not say that finishing the book made me happy. I would rather say that reading the book filled my heart with immense joy. After sheer satisfaction from rejuvenating sleep (I meant that I slept like a baby) night after night for sometime now, my feelings are gratifying to Jane Austen for her style and the taste for delivering literary aesthetics, to Karen Savage for her intonations and heightening the aesthetics, to LibriVox.org for syncing the performances of literary and oratory arts (I mean that writing and reading) through their marvelous platform and to Story Classics for bringing out the extraordinary compilations.

If you are interested you can check the link out: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZhxqauL9WbM

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