Tuesday, 23 April 2024

 

 

LATEST NEWS Karan Singh Nagra appointed as Marketing and Communications Manager of Hyatt Regency Dehradun, Resort & Spa Enthusiastic voters’ response marks first day of home voting in Kalakote Sunderbani-AC Home voting conducted for Senior citizens, PwDs in Samba district Postal ballot voting for ‘Absentee voters on Essential Services’ category held in Samba district Manish Tewari is election tourist, voters will give return ticket on June 4: Jitender Pal Malhotra Akanksha Puri Net Worth [April 2024] | 5 Dariya News Fazilka DC Dr Senu Duggal and SSP come out in field to boost wheat lifting from Market Yards Speed up the Lifting Operations to avoid glut, ADC asks Procurement Agencies Governor Shiv Pratap Shukla stresses the need to ensure clean drinking water LPU Engineering Students adjudged as Top Future Space Innovators by ISRO in National Competition Defeat BJP and oppose its election campaign Put serious questions all other contesting parties regarding their promises and performance at under their regimes :CPI (M-L) N.D. Priya Sethi launches door-to-door campaign to mobilize support for Jugal Kishore Sharma Binding humanity in the thread of unity - Manav Ekta Diwas Gurjit Singh Aujla reached Shastri Market to meet businessmen Unique protest of AAP supporters in IPL match - wearing T-shirts with Arvind Kejriwal's photo they raised slogans of 'Mai bhi Kejriwal' AAP gets strengthened in Faridkot and Khadoor Sahib, big jolt to SAD, Congress and BJP! Five families of Basarke Bhaini join Congress from Akali Dal Late Punjabi Singer Amar Singh Chamkila Net Worth In 1980’s | Music Journey & Controversy Youth should vote enthusiastically in the grand festival of democracy - Chief Electoral Officer Anurag Agarwal Haryana Right to Service Commission imposes Rs 20,000 fine on Junior Engineer for service delay ''Engineering is going to become Quantum" : Prof. Arvind, VC, Punjabi University, Patiala

 

Five books to look forward to in November 2018

Listen to this article

Web Admin

Web Admin

5 Dariya News

New Delhi , 31 Oct 2018

The month of November will reignite memories of long queues at ATMs following the recall of 86 per cent of circulated currency during the demonetisation in 2016 as at least three books -- both fiction and non-fiction -- will attempt to unravel the controversial decision. The month will also witness a leading litfest in Mumbai, along with a specially curated festival celebrating the beauty of classics, and the long list announcement of the DSC Prize for South Asian Literature.Among the most anticipated novels from the coming month is "Don't Tell The Governor" by Ravi Subramanian, whose stories are set against the backdrop of the financial services industry. Published by HarperCollins India, his 10th novel weaves a fictional narrative around demonetisation."When the Prime Minister declares demonetisation at 8 p.m. on 8 November, 2016, it leaves the nation stunned. But the governor of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), who should have ideally been party to the decision, is at a crossroads. He has just carried out the most brazen act of his life -- yet, it looks like it might also have been his most foolish."Will he be able to pull himself out of the mess he has got into or will he be condemned for life? Will he manage to retain his autonomy or meekly surrender to the forces behind the massive scam? Or is he going to be the victim of a very sinister plot? Running desperately out of time, the governor has one week to set things right," the publisher informed IANS about the narrative in the upcoming book.

The next book, non-fiction, is by Meera Sanyal, who stepped down from her role as CEO and Chairperson of the Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) India in December 2013, and is titled "The Big Reverse: How Demonetization Knocked India Out" (HarperCollins India).Describing demonetisation as a black swan event in Indian history, the book, according to the publisher, will provide "the most comprehensive analysis of the policy, its execution and pitfalls". It will present unprecedented insights backed by data, history and research, and as a result, answer the questions that still continue to haunt Indians, on the what, why and how of demonetisation."While the Modi government claimed that it was the silver bullet that India needed to eliminate many of its longstanding problems such as black money, corruption, tax evasion and terror funding, the months that followed proved it otherwise. The return of 99.7 per cent of the banned 500- and 1,000-rupee notes showed that the RBI's idea of a Demonetisation Dividend was nothing but a mirage. In the process, livelihoods of millions in the informal sector were destroyed, causing enormous distress to farmers and traders and forcing many micro, small and medium businesses into bankruptcy," Sanyal notes in the book.And then there is "Of Counsel: The Challenges of the Modi-Jaitley Economy" (Penguin Random House India) by former Chief Economic Advisor Arvind Subramanian, whose trusteeship saw the country through one of the most hotly contested and turbulent periods of economic governance and policymaking in recent decades -- from the demonetisation to the introduction of the Goods and Services Tax, or GST.Subramanian, according to the publisher, provides an inside account of his rollercoaster journey as the CEA. 

With an illustrious cast of characters, Subramanian's part-memoir, part-analytical book candidly reveals the numerous triumphs and challenges of policymaking at the zenith, while appraising India's economic potential through comprehensive research and original hypotheses.Bibliophiles will also be introduced to "A Stranger Truth: Lessons in Love, Leadership and Courage from India's Sex Workers" by Ashok Alexander (Juggernaut).When Alexander left a high-profile corporate job to head Avahan, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation's programme to stem the growth of the HIV epidemic in India, he was plunged into a world far removed from the comfort zones he had lived and worked in all his life. It was a grinding place where women sold themselves for Rs 50 and 14-year-olds injected drugs. It was the shadow world of transgenders and of young gay men in a country that still criminalised same-sex love.During the 10 years Alexander built Avahan, it grew to become one of the largest and most successful HIV prevention programmes in the world, credited with averting over 6.5 lakh new infections. Based on his experiences, "A Stranger Truth" compellingly brings alive the world of people most vulnerable to HIV/AIDS, and some of the unlikely heroes among them.And last but not the least, there is "Heads You Win" by Jeffrey Archer, published by PanMacmillan. It is billed as an "incredible and thrilling novel" by the master storyteller, whose final twist will shock even his most ardent fans. The publisher said that this is the international number one bestselling author's "most ambitious and creative work" since "Kane and Abel".

 

Tags: Book

 

 

related news

 

 

 

Photo Gallery

 

 

Video Gallery

 

 

5 Dariya News RNI Code: PUNMUL/2011/49000
© 2011-2024 | 5 Dariya News | All Rights Reserved
Powered by: CDS PVT LTD