The greatest compliment to this song is that I never seem to get bored of it. Many songs regularly find a place in my winamp 'Repeat' list but only a few songs retain their flavor even after years of repeated listening. Vijay appearing in different T-shirts and the scene of Vijay kicking a piece of twig will always remain etched in my memory along with the days of walking through the hostel blocks with my plate towards the college mess. Some memories like these are forever engraved in our minds like beautiful idols on the facade of a majestic temple.
Friday, May 02, 2008
Thana-Nana Thaana-Nana: Ennai Thaalata Varuvaalo
The greatest compliment to this song is that I never seem to get bored of it. Many songs regularly find a place in my winamp 'Repeat' list but only a few songs retain their flavor even after years of repeated listening. Vijay appearing in different T-shirts and the scene of Vijay kicking a piece of twig will always remain etched in my memory along with the days of walking through the hostel blocks with my plate towards the college mess. Some memories like these are forever engraved in our minds like beautiful idols on the facade of a majestic temple.
Labels: Movies, Music, Personal Experience, Tamil
According To Me: Greatest Book Ever
I have this list of top 100 books (fiction & non-fiction) that I got from a website. My search these days - to a small extent atleast - consist of searching for these books in libraries and old book shops. I suddenly got this question on what is the greatest book that I have read till now & what would be the best book that I would read in my lifetime?
Labels: Books, Personal Experience
Change is the only constant thing!

101 thoughts/ideas flow through my mind everyday and still I am not doing a great job in capturing these random thoughts in paper/blog. Under the topic "According To Me" (ATM in short), I am planning on scribbling those thoughts for people to comment and debate. What will this 'According To Me' have? From descriptions of the idlies of Madurai to the idiosyncrasies of life, from Karl Marx to Kamasutra, from rocket science to Royal Challengers, anything that captures my mind for a fleeting second and makes me think will find its way into this space. If you are looking for some great ideas then this is not the place for you! I am looking forward to creating some heated arguments through these topics. After all, I am an "Argumentative Indian" with a love for controversies.
Music plays a very important part in my life. From listening to almost all the new releases (In Tamil, of course) to tracking down & listening to not-so-popular hit numbers of Ilayaraaja, not a day passes without having some music playing. There are some songs that capture our imaginations and transport us to a different phase our life reminding us of the times (good & bad) that we have passed. Anytime we hear those songs, they take us through a nostalgic trip to a different place & time. It could either be the carefree, fun-filled days of our childhood, the unrecoverable & immutable lovely college days or the hard working days in front of the computer at office. Each one of us have our own set of such songs & through "Thana-Nana Thaana-Nana", I plan to fine-tune my thoughts on such songs. Do not expect any technical analysis of the songs for I am below the level of a novice when it comes to identifying raagas and instruments. These articles would just be limited to how I feel on hearing these songs and the places to which they transport me to.
As usual, I expect your comments and suggestions on ways to improve my blog, my writing and ultimately my inner self.
Labels: Personal Experience
Thursday, March 27, 2008
Click click -- Random Images
Photo #3: Nothing compares to the various shops that are there in the beach. Beach is probably one of my most favorite photo hunting grounds and this photo of a 'Bajji' shop in the natural light has come out perfectly. The trick here is to switch off your flash when you want to take photos in the natural light.
Labels: Personal Experience, Photos
Tuesday, March 25, 2008
The Age of Kali -- Book Review

People could easily dismiss this book as yet another travelogue but what makes this book a MUST read is the intertwining of history with a beautiful & lucid narration. Dalrymple is not yet another english traveller who travels through this great country of ours narrating what he sees. He is an observer as well as a knowledge seeker. He does his homework really well & backs up his narration of incidents with some great historical perspectives. He explains away the 'almost' lazy nature of the Hyderabad people to the wealth that oozed out from the great treasures of the Nawabs who ruled their lands for a long time. He dismisses the perceived arrogance of the Pathans of the North eastern frontier to the constant attacks that they had to endure & repulse from various conquerors.
The other thing that is so striking about this book is the almost non-chalant way of his interviews with the people concerned. Be it the measured questions that he poses to the female wing leaders of the LTTE or the satirical questions to Laloo Prasad Yadav, the earnestness of his questions filter through all of them. More than the interviews with the popular personalities, it is his interviews with the common man that he meets in these various places that add a lot of value & spiciness to the essays.
I rate books not on their literary value but based on whether the particular book made me think. Opening up new thought avenues over which my mind could float around is one of the essential characteristics that I look for in a book. Being a person brought up in a calm city like Chennai, the culture of violence that is prevalent in Patna & abject decadence of Lucknow were shocking. It is not that I was not aware of these situations but the stark naked reality when portrayed in a telling way left a lasting impression. Last but not the least, one of the major changes that this book has brought about is the way in which I would be looking at places to which I would be travelling in the future. Instead of looking at these places from the perspective of a photographer, I will be looking at these places with reference & reverence to their history & background. Due to this increased perspective, I am very confident that the world around me would brighten up in a light that my human lenses have failed to capture till now .
Bottom Line: Any person who is interested in travel should read this book. And the others, I dont think you will regret the time spent reading this book.
Monday, March 17, 2008
The Great Indian Novel -- Book Review
"The Great Indian Novel" by Shashi Tharoor combines Indian politics right from the days of 1857 with Mahabaratha - the epic of epic proportions- and produces a parody of characters that is both endearing & intense. Be it Bhisma Gangaji trying his hand at celibacy by sleeping with au naturel woman or Dhiritharshtra, the blind idealist king who sternly believes what he wants to believe, anyone with even a sniff of knowledge of the stinky Indian politics would be able to identify that Gangaji is none other than the enigmatic Gandhi & Dhiritharshtra is Nehru. There are so many analogies in this book that the best place for you to check out would be this site here.
This novel brought up something that caused me intense pain; a pain that is caused when you realize how less you know about your country and the people who have sacrificed so much for the freedom that I have been flaunting so merrily all these days. The lesser that I have known about the history of my country, I feel the lesser I am able to appreciate the things that I take for granted. Maybe I would have start spending more time digging up some of the history books that I looked at disdainfully during my school days.
The greatest thing about this novel is the way in which Tharoor maintains the momentum & the interest right from the beginning till the end of the novel. Even during the deviations from the main storyline, the author is able to sustain the interest of the reader with interesting anecdotes from our great Indian history. The jabs that he takes at the various characters are noteworthy not just for the humor but also for the profound meanings that he conveys through those witty references.
The greatest drawback that I could find in the novel is that Tharoor seems to be vacillating between his opinions of the various characters. There seems to be no consistency about the way in which a character is portrayed. The interesting thing about this observation is that the author himself seems to be aware of this as he concludes the novel by starting to narrate the story all over again. The other notable point is regarding the use of the language itself. I am no expert when it comes to the English language and I had to frequently resort to the comfort of the dictionary for deciphering some of the words that Tharoor has used in the book.
Bottom Line: This is one of those rare books that amalgamates politics with mythology and comes home with its trails blazing. A definite read for anyone interested in taking a sarcastic look at the present Indian political scene.
Vellithirai -- Movie Review

I was a bit apprehensive when I learnt that Prakash Raj was doing the role of Srinivasan. Srinivasan is basically a comedy actor and I was not sure whether Prakash Raj did the right thing by casting himself in that role (Prakash Raj is one of the producers). I soon found out that my fears were baseless for Prakash Raj steals the show with some brilliant acting. It is said that Prakash Raj is a director’s actor. It is very true for he can easily go overboard with his histrionics and easily spoil the movie if the director does not exert the right amount of control over his acting. A director should have complete control and Viji (The director of this movie) seems to have found the correct mix for getting the best out of Prakash Raj.
The story is about two struggling film artists trying to make their mark in Kollywood. One of them is Kannayan (Prakash Raj), an actor aiming to be a hero and the other is Saravanan (Prithvi Raj), an assistant director aspiring to be a director. Saravanan has a story ready and a producer agrees to go ahead with the film. Before the movie could start, Kannayan steals the story from Saravanan and gets it registered in his name. The strength of the story forces a producer to accept the condition of Kannayan to cast him as the hero for the movie in exchange for him to produce the movie. Kannayan becomes a superstar and renames himself as Dileepkanth. What happens to Saravanan and whether he is able to attain his rightful position forms the rest of the plot. Gopika plays the role of the lady interest of Prithvi Raj.
If Prakash Raj’s acting is the highlight of the movie, the support extended by Prithvi Raj & Gopika is equally commendable. They seem to have understood their role perfectly and go on to nail it to perfection. The fact that the director has the guts to make fun of the stardom enjoyed by some of the actors in the film industry is to be appreciated. Viji plays it safe and seems to have drawn an invisible line regarding where the satire of the film industry can stop.
The music & songs of the movie play a very prominent role in making this movie a thoroughly enjoyable watch. The director had the convenience of introducing the songs as though they are part for the movies that the characters are working on and this provides her with the advantage of not having songs that appear to have been forced on the viewer.
One of the few grouches that I have with the movie is the way the movie ended. The original movie climax appeared to be more logical and ‘Vellithirai’ seem to have faltered a bit in the way the climax is played out. It appears to have been rushed up a bit. May be Prakash Raj wanted to maintain his ‘Image’as a superstar!!!
Last Cut: A movie that can be watched for its simplicity.
Rating: 8/10
Monday, March 03, 2008
George Orwell -- A tribute

If ‘Animal Farm’ gave me a leeway to start liking Orwell’s works, what clinched the deal would be the collection of essays called “Shooting an Elephant & Other Essays” that I picked up from the library. If the language flows freely like Tendulkar’s cover drives, the impact that it creates is similar to a tennis ball meeting Dhoni’s heavy bat. The profound nature of his writing is something that can never be described in words but can only be felt while reading. Happy Reading!!!
P.S: Check out his website here. Almost all of his work can be read from this site.
Labels: Books, Personal Experience
Anjaathe -- Movie Review

There are some really cool scenes (The interview scene for Naren & his friend) and exemplary camera works (Showing just the legs of the main players during the scene where Kirupa brings home the villains) along the way that make you sit up and take notice. Sadly, these are few and far apart. The momentum that the story generates is lost in the tardy screenplay and the director seems confused about the genre of his movie. It starts off as though it is a tragic-comedy movie, moves to the action movie genre, then finally ends up being a psycho thriller. Each of these segments is adequate in its own way but when combined into a 3 hours & 15 minutes movie (No typo there. It is indeed 3 hours), it loses its sheen due to the director’s inability to stick to a particular theme.
Then there is the stolen background score towards the fag end of the movie. The theme music of ‘Signs’ is shamelessly lifted during the fight sequence between Naren & Prasanna. This lift of a popular theme stands like a sour thumb for Sundar C.Babu (The music director) who has otherwise done a decent job in the re-recording and the 3+1(Title bit song) songs. The clipped dialogues reminded me of Manirathnam’s ‘Agni Natchathiram’!!!!
There was nothing much to talk about in terms of the acting talents of the lead actors in this movie. I liked the role of Pandiarajan with his squint eyes rolling here & there, the unmistakable sign of working on something fishy. Prasanna was looking out of sorts in his role as villain. At best, his hairstyle would have made a poodle envious.
Last Cut: There are some movies that fail to make impressions of any sort in your mind. There is nothing terribly wrong with them for you to hate them completely. On the flip side, there is nothing really good that makes you remember it. ‘Anjaathe’ perfectly fits that bill. A pretender that could have been a lot better if the director had spent enough time on his screenplay.
Rating: 6/10
Tuesday, February 26, 2008
Lord of the Flies -- Book Review

The novel starts in a remote island where a group of school boys (12 year olds & some 6-7 year olds) are left stranded after the crash of the plane in which they were traveling. With no adult survivors, they are left with no adults to supervise and regulate them. They feel elated and start enjoying their freedom. Like any society with abundant freedom and power but no rules/laws, confusion soon ensues leaving the boys in a world of chaos. When a mysterious beast starts making its appearance, the lethal combination of fear & lawlessness evokes complete disintegration of the moral fabric of those young minds. Whether the boys realize their folly and return to their homes forms the rest of the plot.
The author, William Golding, asserts through this novel that violence is inbuilt in the nature of human beings and age is no factor on when this monster would get unleashed. Like the waves that wash ashore the dirt that we throw into the sea, Golding brings the extremely poisonous dirt called violence from the innermost corners of our maze-like heart. The clinical precision and methodical writing creates an uneasy feeling in our minds that refuses to go away easily. If the description of the forest, the lagoon and the sea are natural & free-flowing, the description of the violence and the moral disintegration is depraving and disturbing. I would attribute the deep impact that this novel creates to the fact that the protagonists are children of age 12 and below. A set of adults performing these heinous crimes would not have created such a ripple among the readers. Choosing children to highlight the darkness that lies within each other is a class act by the author.
This novel is a truly amazing psychological journey into regions hitherto unexplored revealing the true colors of human nature. It goes on to show that every human has grey areas that could get transformed into unimaginable blackness/darkness at any point of time.
Bottom Line: A classic & a MUST READ.
(The UBSPD edition of this novel has chapter-wise summaries & comments at the end of the novel. The comments section elaborates on the hidden meaning of some of the references in the story. The ‘List of Characters’ at the beginning of the novel needs to be avoided as it contains spoilers which can reduce the impact of some of the incidents in the novel)
Tuesday, February 19, 2008
Idleness as an 'ideal'ness

The following lines are taken verbatim from the book "The idle thoughts of an idle fellow" by Jerome.K.Jerome. Is there a need to mention that I perfectly fit into the above description?
Labels: Books, Jovial, Literature
Monday, February 18, 2008
Acacia & Ants -- A complex story

On a related philosophical note, are humans also similar to this? Will they become ineffective & wither away if the challenges that are posed to them are removed? Are problems and complexities that we face in our life someway related to our sustained growth?
Labels: News, Personal Experience
The Present -- Book Review
இன்று -1
நேற்று நினைவு,
நாளை கனவு,
இன்று நிஜம்.
நிஜங்கள் ரசிப்போம்.
இன்று -2
நேற்று நெருடாமல்,
நாளை நெருக்காமல்.
இன்றை இன்றே வாழ்ந்துவிடு.
The two tamil verses (Incidentally these were NOT written after reading the book) and what happened to me in the morning pretty much summarizes what this book is all about. It highlights the importance of learning from the past, planning for the future but ALWAYS living in the 'Present' by using a simple parable.
Tuesday, February 05, 2008
யார் யார் சிவம்......
உயிர்களெல்லாம் தெய்வமன்றிப் பிறவொன் றில்லை;
Monday, January 28, 2008
A Comedy of Errors -- Book Review
Year of Publication: 2007
This book has been there with me for quite sometime & the day to read it came only yesterday. I have been reading Tamil books continuously and so wanted to read something different to freshen up my thoughts. This book was small & it deals with something that has always been one of my greatest pet peeves (Or secret interests?): Management!!!
The book has all the ingredients for a great read. Like ’Just out of microwave' popcorn, this has all the spiciness/crispiness to sustain interest throughout. Laced with this is the fact that the story is set as a narration between a couple of characters. Sam (Short for Saminathan) is the hero of this book and he works for a company called Y2K technologies. He is going through a professional mid-life crisis being stuck in Y2K technologies for the last 5 years. He is not sure on whether he is a valued resource in his company or yet another programmer who goes through the bugger (Used instead of the word 'Grind' to differentiate the work of a programmer from the other menial tasks!) He is assigned to travel to US for a new project and he is assigned to work under a new manager called Bob.
The witty (And thought provoking) conversations between Sam & Bob form the crux of this book. Bob is a person who has seen it all in the world of marketing & management and fills the role of a mentor for Sam with pleasure. His profound and yet down to earth practical solutions brings out the manager in Sam. Whether the hidden manager in Sam is capable of landing the big project forms the rest of the plot.
The greatest plus for this book is that it covers almost all the important concepts like presentation skills, employee retention, motivating people and all other relevant stuff. Ironically, this also is this book's greatest minus. The author Prasanna Kumar tries to squeeze in everything in this small book (127 pages) and in successfully doing so, he fails to deal in-depth into any of the essential topics.
Bottom Line: All said & done, this is a book that is worth reading as a quick refresher for your management principles. At just Rs.95, it can easily fit into your budget as well. Read it when you want to do some light and humorous read.
Labels: Books, Management, Review
Monday, January 21, 2008
En Peyar Raamaseshan -- Book Review
ஒற்றை வார்த்தையில், லோக்கல் பாஷையில் இந்த புத்தகத்தைப் பற்றி சொல்ல வேண்டுமென்றால், அந்த ஒரு வார்த்தை: நெத்தியடி. முதல் பக்கத்திலேயே சிக்ஸர் அடித்து கவனத்தை கவரும் எழுத்தாளர் ஆதவன், Virendar Sehwag போல 40 ரன்னில் அவுட்டாகாமல், ஆவேசமின்றி ஆசுவாசமாய் 200 அடிக்கிறார். ஒவ்வொரு பக்கத்திலும் "சபாஷ்!" சொல்ல வைக்கும் வகையில் உள்ளது இந்த நாவல் என்று கூறினால் அது மிகையாகாது.
மனிதர்களும், அவர்களின் பல வேஷங்களும் முகமூடிகளும் தான் இந்த கதையின் கரு. மனிதர்களின் பல திரைகளை கிழித்தெறிந்து, அவர்களை நிர்மூலமாக்கி, நிர்வாணமாக்கி, மேடையில் ஏற்றி நமது hypocrisy மீது spotlight அடித்து காண்பிக்கிறார் ஆதவன். 1980ஆம் ஆண்டு எழுதப்பட்டிருந்தாலும், இன்றைக்கும் புதிதாய், நடைமுறை நிகழ்வுகளுக்கு பிரதிபலிப்பாய் உள்ளது தான் இந்த நாவலின் சிறப்பாம்சம்.
ராமசேஷன் என்னும் கதாபாத்திரம் சொல்லும் தன் சுயசரிதை என்று மேலோட்டமாக சொன்னாலும், இது சுயசரிதை என்பதை விட ஒரு சுயவிசாரணை என்பதே சரியாக பொருந்தும். ராமசேஷன் தன் இன்ஜினியரிங் படிப்பை தொடங்கும் காலத்தில் தொடங்கும் கதை, அவன் படிப்பை முடிக்கும் போது நிறைவடைகிறது. தான் சமூகம் ஆட்டிவைக்கும் பொம்மலாட்ட பொம்மையாகி விடக்கூடாது என்னும் ஓட்டத்தில் கலந்து கொண்டு, அவ்வோடத்தினாலேயே அந்த சமூகத்தின் கைப்பாவையாகிறான். In trying hard not to be a product of the society, unknowingly, he becomes a product of the society.
7 (அல்லது) 8 முக்கிய கதாபாத்திரங்கள் மட்டுமே கொண்டு 200 பக்க நாவலை மிக அழகாக நிரப்பியுள்ளார் ஆதவன் அவர்கள். ஒவ்வொரு கதாபாத்திரமும் நம் ஒவ்வொருவரின் ஒரு வேஷம் போல் symbolically அமைத்துள்ளார். புகழ் விரும்பும் ஒருவர், புகழினால் கர்வம் கொள்ளாத ஒருவர், புகழ் அடைந்த மற்றவர் மேல் தன் காழ்புணர்ச்சியை எறியும் ஒருவர், மரபுகளை எதிர்க்க தைரியம் இல்லாத ஒருவர் என சராசரி மனிதர்களின் பல பிம்பங்களை கட்ட அவிழ்த்து விடுகிறார். கதாபாத்திரங்கள் அரைகுறையாக இல்லாமல், நன்கு செதுக்கப்பட்ட சிலை போல் இருப்பது கதைக்கு மேலும் மெருகூட்டுகின்றது.
Bottom Line: நான் இதுவரை படித்த மிக சிறந்த புத்தகங்களில் இதுவும் ஒன்று. நிச்சயமாக தமிழ் தெரிந்த அனைவரும் படித்து மகிழ வேண்டிய புத்தகம்.
மனதில் நின்றது: நாம் நம்ப விரும்புவதைத்தான் நம்புகிறோமே தவிர, நம்ப வேண்டியதை அல்ல.
Bheema -- Movie Review
If you found the 'Story' in the above paragraph, there is every chance that you would end up finding a story in this movie as well. And if you had never understood the meaning of the term "Colossal waste of resources", I would recommend you to watch this movie. Top notch performers like Vikram, Prakash Raj, Raghuvaran, the great cameraman R.D.Rajasekar and the lilting tunes of Harris Jeyaraj are grossly mishandled & what we get is a product that can be directly dumped into river Cooum.
Is this director Lingusamy the same one who gave us such racy flicks like 'Run' & 'Sandai Kozhi'? Is he the director who gave us the family entertainer 'Aanandam'? So much is the gulf between these movies and Bheema that I am planning on writing to Ripley's 'Believe it or not' to add these as facts so that the common man believes they are by the same director.
Vikram tries real hard to carry this movie on his shoulders but, like the 'N' number of people who fall prey to his bullets, he also falls pathetically short. Vikram looks aged and maybe its time for him to consider roles that suits his age instead of prancing around with young heroines. Trisha looks perfectly like a doll. Beautiful & lifeless. Acting and Trisha are like south pole & north pole; miles apart and no chance whatsoever for an overlap.
The editing, camera and background music are top notch. It seems Harris Jeyaraj spent close to 48 days for the re-recording and the effort shows in each & every frame. Except for minor aberrations here & there, he scores BIG time in this movie. The song "Mudhal Mazhai" is pleasing aurally & visually. All said & done, this is a movie that really tested my patience. My friend summed up the movie perfectly when he turned to me just before the intermission and asked me with a serious face the question, "When will the movie begin?". Enough said.
Last Cut: Avoid it at all costs.
Rating: 3.5/10
Monday, December 31, 2007
The Year That Was.............
2007 was:
Have a Great Year 2008!!!!
Labels: Personal Experience
Wednesday, November 14, 2007
Iacocca: An Autobiography -- Book Review

The story starts at an intermediate point in his career when he was fired from the post of the president of the Ford Motor Company and how humiliated he felt at that time. This start definitely promised a lot for it made me look forward for the reason of Iacocca being fired from his post and also raised my expectations on how stoked up he would be to seek sweet revenge by taking the mantle at Chrysler.
The story (The first part) then traces back his childhood days with his father coming & settling in US as an immigrant from Italy. The lead up from here to Iacocca getting hired at Ford is pretty fluid and retains my undivided attention. His honest admission (after completing a Master’s degree in Engineering) that he was not cut out for engineering and his switching to sales talks a great deal about the kind of person Iacocca is. His initial years at Ford are explained in great detail to the extent of explaining the kind of training that is given at Ford. The conception of the Ford Mustang and the associated marketing frenzy that his team created for selling the car is a lesson on successful management of ideas and forceful action. What follows after this is a dull & one-sided narration of the events that led to his fight with Henry Ford Jr. The reasons & justifications that Iacocca provide for him to stick with Ford even after learning at close quarters the type of person that Henry Ford Jr. is unconvincing and stinks of a selfish attitude. His bad-mouthing of Henry Ford Jr. is the worst part of this autobiography and it greatly brought down the respect I had for Iacocca. Even though Iacocca tries to convince us that he has forgotten about the humiliation of being fired from Ford, it is highly apparent that it is not the case.
The second part of the autobiography where he describes about taking up the challenge of reviving Chrysler is where the book goes horribly wrong. Loaded with legal jargons and details that fail to make sense for most part, it appears at best to be an effort to fill a particular agreed amount of pages for the book. This is the part of the story that should have taken the reader on a magical ride & sadly all that it does is to take us through a tragical ride with no timeline details that left me wondering about how long it actually took Iacocca to get Chrysler out of its losses. The last two chapters (About the need for seatbelt & yanking up the competition to the Japanese) seemed a total waste of time for it is readily apparent at this point that Iacocca has run out of things to write and that he is writing all this to fill up the space.
Bottom Line: Read it only if you are a BIG fan of Iacocca. You will be better of reading some of the other self-help and management books if you are looking for motivators.
Wednesday, November 07, 2007
Vijayawada Trip Images -- Part III
Photo #1: A saint walking near the river Krishna. His colorful attire, the trident in his hands, the matted hair and the yellow vermilion smeared on his forehead was something that conveyed a lot of strength. I did not get a lot of time to capture this image for there were a lot of people taking bath in the river and I had to hurry with my snap.
Photo #2: There is something so soothing and peaceful about children playing in a park. Their carefree nature when mixed with the spaciousness of a park brings out the best from children. This small guy(The one in the white shirt) was slowly climbing up the ladder to go down the slide and I immediately got ready with my camera. Unfortunately, his elder brother (The one in the blue shirt) took him in his lap to go down the slide. Just before I could snap the moment, the elder brother found out that I was getting ready for taking a photo. The way in which the small guy is expectantly looking down at the slide unmindful of everything else around him best summarizes the picture.
Photo #3: A tricycle driver lost in his world. He seems to be totally dwelling in his own thought train with no awareness to the fact that he is driving in the wrong side of the road. This photo was shot near the hotel in which I stayed.
Photo #4
Photo #4: A person begging for alms from people returning from the Kanaga Durga temple. The kaleidoscopic nature of her dress, the dark tone of her skin and the innocent looking child in front of her evoked so deep a feeling that I couldn't help but snap this photo. The fact that I was walking down the stairs when I took this photo explains the blurred looking nature of this image.
Labels: Personal Experience, Photos