20 episodes

A podcast that celebrates books and reading and the beauty of the written word--spoken out loud.

Reading for our times Usha Raman

    • Arts
    • 5.0 • 1 Rating

A podcast that celebrates books and reading and the beauty of the written word--spoken out loud.

    HLF Unmuted #2: A dash of Hyderabadi flavour

    HLF Unmuted #2: A dash of Hyderabadi flavour

    The Hyderabad Literary Festival is a truly local mela, mixed in with the flavours of other regions of the country and of course the world. In this episode, we speak to some of the many who have participated in the festival in different ways, from organizing it to funding it to bringing in the books and art and discussion, to simply reveling in it.

    Featured in the episode are:

    Jayesh Ranjan, Festival Director and Principal Secretary, Industries & Commerce and Information Technology, Government of Telangana

    Sadhana Ramchander, Editor, and Founder, Blue Pencil Infodesign

    Kalpana Kannabiran, Sociologist and Legal Scholar, Director, Central for Social Development

    Aparna Rayaprol, Professor, Department of Sociology and Trustee, Rayaprol Literary Trust

    Seetha Anand Vaidyam, Early Childhood Educator

    Serish Nanisetti, Journalist and Author

    Uday Rao, Orient Blackswan Limited

    You can find all the sessions of HLF2021 on the YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCQMVlk0wc0EcvwNXzMvFQeA

    • 18 min
    Hyderabad Literary Festival 2021: Behind the Scenes

    Hyderabad Literary Festival 2021: Behind the Scenes

    Every year in the last week of January, Hyderabad hosts its own literary festival, a variegated celebration of books, cinema, art, theatre, poetry...in short, all things cultural. But not just cultural. There’s also a good dose of environment, civic discourse, and of course, street food and Irani chai. This year, though, the festival will be online, and while we will of course miss the charm of sitting under the trees and spending three days basking in the pleasures of literature and the imagination, the show will go on. In this special episode of Reading for Our Times, I speak with the four directors of the Hyderabad Literary Festival about the 2021 iteration—the challenges it brings, and the promise it still has to create “social togetherness” not just for those in the city, but everywhere on the Internet where there is a love of culture.

    For more information on HLF2021, visit the website: www.hydlitfest.org and follow the festival on YouTube over the three days of the festival (January 22-24) and beyond!

    • 23 min
    Our Year in Reading--Wrapping up 2020

    Our Year in Reading--Wrapping up 2020

    In all the uncertainty and anxiety  of 2020, we continued to find sustenance, refuge, learning and enjoyment in books. On walls, they lent gravitas to Zoom calls, and contributed to year-end Christmas cheer as they danced into tree-like piles. But most of all, they lent warmth to the hands and delight to the eyes and mind, whether on the backlit screens of kindles or in varied font on creamy rag.

    In this special episode of Reading for our Times, a few readers look back at their year in books—what they meant, what they gave, and why reading is for all time.

    Here’s a list of books featured in the episode:

    A Memory of Light (Book 11 in The Wheel of Time Series) by Robert Jordan and Brandon Sanderson

    The Goldfinch by Donna Tart

    Good Morning, Midnight by Lily Brooks-Dalton

    To the Lake by Kapka Kassabova

    Home by Marilynne Robinson

    Beastly Tales from Here and There by Vikram Seth

    A Beginner’s Guide to Japan by Pico Iyer

    Vesper Flights by Helen McDonald

    Farthest Field by Raghu Karnad

    The Spirit of Indian Painting by B N Goswami

    The Odyssey by Homer, translated by Emily Wilson

    If you’re ever short of book recommendations, you may wish to check out Suroor Ali Khan’s blog, which has a wealth of reviews, posted weekly: Talking About Books

    • 31 min
    Sports off the field

    Sports off the field

    This episode takes us on a sporting journey—on and off the field and track, inside the minds and lives of athletes known and unknown, as well as those who write about them. We have a great cast of readers, many of whom are rather well known sports writers and sports persons, people who have been immersed in the field. This genre, I’m discovering, is as much about the magic of what happens in formal and informal arenas as about the dynamics—the politics--that permeate broader social and cultural life. The readings offer some glimpses into the breadth of this genre.



    Books featured in this episode:

    Born to Run: the hidden tribe, the ultra runners and the greatest race the world has never seen by Christopher Mcdougall (read by Karunya Keshav)

    Ten for Sixty Six and all that by Arthur Mailey (read by S Giridhar)

    Playing with Fire by Nasser Hussain (read by Ananya Upendran)

    The Test by Nathan Leamon (read by Shikha Pandey)

    What’s my Name, Fool? Sports and Resistance in the United States by David Zirin (read by Sharda Ugra)

    My Way: a biography of M L Jaisimha by A Joseph Anthony and Jayanthi Jaisimha (read by Agnes George

    The Wit of Cricket by Brian Johnston (read by S Upendran)

    You can also check out these books by our some of the readers in this episode:

    The Fire Burns Blue by Siddhantha Pattnaik and Karunya Keshav

    From Mumbai to Durban by S Giridhar

    • 39 min
    Formative Passages

    Formative Passages

    Books have a way of getting into our DNA, burrowing deep into the way we see the world, our place in it, and the possibilities of change or the complexities of acceptance. In this episode, writer and media analyst Achala Upendran curates a set of readings that were chosen because of their formative role in one's worldview, or because they opened up a different way of seeing.

    Books featured in the episode:

    1. Matilda, Roald Dahl (read by Anuja Vaidya)

    2. A Little Princess, Francis Hodgson Burnett (read by Priyanka Mookerjee)

    3. The Giver, Lois Lowry (read by Shreya Jindal)

    4. The Book of Lost Things, John Connolly (read by Achala Upendran)

    5. A Two Toned Tale, Bonophool (read by Ramona Sen)

    7. The Wind Up Bird Chronicle, Haruki Murakami (read by Neha Vaddadi)

    8. If This is a Man, Primo Levi (read by Tarini Mookerjee)



    Some of the readers are writers too! Do check out their books:

    Hedon by Priyanka Mookerjee (Penguin, 2016)

    Simply Complicated and Another Chance at Life by Shreya Jindal (Penguin Metro Reads)

    Crème Brulee by Ramona Sen (Rupa, 2016)

    The Sultanpur Chronicles: The Shadowed City by Achala Upendran (Hachette, 2018)

    • 40 min
    Einstein's Dreams: A Conversation with Alan Lightman

    Einstein's Dreams: A Conversation with Alan Lightman

    This week’s episode features an interview with the writer Alan Lightman and a short reading from his book, Einstein’s Dreams. Alan Lightman is the author of several books that traverse the spaces of science fiction, spiritualism and philosophy, and the conversation reflects his journey across these domains.

    The interview was first aired as part of a series called "Caught in Passing" on the University of Hyderabad's Campus Community Radio station, Bol Hyderabad, in 2017. It’s a few years on, and in the intervening period Alan has written a few more books, including, in 2018, In Praise of Wasting Time, something that is particularly relevant to our modern overworked, overscheduled lives, thrown into such disarray by the pandemic and the resulting lockdown.

    Books by Alan Lightman mentioned in the episode

    Einstein’s Dreams (2004, Vintage)

    Song of Two Worlds (2017, Red Hen Press)

    In Praise of Wasting Time (2018, TED Books)

    The Diagnosis (2002, Vintage)

    You can find the essay in Nautilus here: http://nautil.us/issue/16/nothingness/ingenious-alan-lightman

    The clip of Beethoven’s Moonlight Sonata is from Wikimedia’s open access library: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Moonlight_Sonata_Presto.ogg 

    • 28 min

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