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You may not use the words "luv" "lol" "pneet" and "fathom", but all other words most welcome.
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Friday, February 23, 2007
Wednesday, February 21, 2007
Op ven øster Bøkernase Frütsaläde
Püt om topp søck!
Ungdom fur alles!
Ja wir haben tøk
Und glemt me my talles!
Click here for Bokklubben for the schlubben!
Ungdom fur alles!
Ja wir haben tøk
Und glemt me my talles!
Click here for Bokklubben for the schlubben!
Tuesday, February 20, 2007
New Punjabi nonsense from Khushwant Singh
Many thanks to Khushwant Singh for his two (!) columns--and especially for giving us more nonsense. The following is from his Hindustan Times column:
Children of my generation knew a lot of nonsense verse by heart. It faded out of memory with the onset of years and we rubbed out what remained as too childish to be remembered. I tried to recall what I once knew by rote. The most popular one was as follows:
Akkar dukkar bhumbai bhau
Assee, nubbey, poorey sau
Sau mein laaga dhaaga
Chor nikal kar bhaaga.
Akkar, dukkar, bhumbai bhau.
Translated:
Eighty, ninety, to a full hundred.
String the hundred by a thread
The thief ran out and fled.
Eighty, ninety, to a full hundred.
Some nonsense verse had educational aims. So we learnt the English alphabet:
ABC Too kitthey gaeo see
Edward mar gayaa
Pittan gayee see
Translated:
ABC Where did you go
Edward died, and so
I went to beat my breast.)
For some reason when we had to cram multiplication tables when it came to nine into nine is 81, we put in verse:
Nau nai ikkasee
Booko teyree masee
Translated
Nine into nine makes 81
Your mother’s sister is a monkey.
Another entirely meaningless favourite was a meaningless jingle you could add to as you please:
Chal, chal, Chameli bagh mein / mewa khil aoonga;
Mewey kee daalee tootgayee / chadar bichhaoonga;
Chaddar ka phattaa konaa / Darzi Bulaoonga
Darzee kee tootee sooee / Loohar bulaoonga
Lohar Ka toota hathaura / ghora dauraoonga.
I can’t bother to transalate this one; none of these are in the book. It has many better examples taken from all our languages.
Children of my generation knew a lot of nonsense verse by heart. It faded out of memory with the onset of years and we rubbed out what remained as too childish to be remembered. I tried to recall what I once knew by rote. The most popular one was as follows:
Akkar dukkar bhumbai bhau
Assee, nubbey, poorey sau
Sau mein laaga dhaaga
Chor nikal kar bhaaga.
Akkar, dukkar, bhumbai bhau.
Translated:
Eighty, ninety, to a full hundred.
String the hundred by a thread
The thief ran out and fled.
Eighty, ninety, to a full hundred.
Some nonsense verse had educational aims. So we learnt the English alphabet:
ABC Too kitthey gaeo see
Edward mar gayaa
Pittan gayee see
Translated:
ABC Where did you go
Edward died, and so
I went to beat my breast.)
For some reason when we had to cram multiplication tables when it came to nine into nine is 81, we put in verse:
Nau nai ikkasee
Booko teyree masee
Translated
Nine into nine makes 81
Your mother’s sister is a monkey.
Another entirely meaningless favourite was a meaningless jingle you could add to as you please:
Chal, chal, Chameli bagh mein / mewa khil aoonga;
Mewey kee daalee tootgayee / chadar bichhaoonga;
Chaddar ka phattaa konaa / Darzi Bulaoonga
Darzee kee tootee sooee / Loohar bulaoonga
Lohar Ka toota hathaura / ghora dauraoonga.
I can’t bother to transalate this one; none of these are in the book. It has many better examples taken from all our languages.
Monday, February 19, 2007
Hamecdotal Edifence-- blogs, frogs, clogs...
I was delighted to find Catmeister's blog. She seems to have found some inspiration in nonsense!
Here's another blog with a tip of the noggin to nonsense:
Indiadrant's blog. Check out Sun., 18 Feb.
By way of Khushwant Singh, another thoughtful bloggish konkimplation about the book:
Eggstreamly Eggcentric's Blog . Check out Sun., 26 Feb.
Misquotes from Williams aside, here's another blogger who wants us: Nandan Newlander's Blog
From our dear Thinkopotamus: Click here
Here's another blog with a tip of the noggin to nonsense:
Indiadrant's blog. Check out Sun., 18 Feb.
By way of Khushwant Singh, another thoughtful bloggish konkimplation about the book:
Eggstreamly Eggcentric's Blog . Check out Sun., 26 Feb.
Misquotes from Williams aside, here's another blogger who wants us: Nandan Newlander's Blog
From our dear Thinkopotamus: Click here
Labels:
blog,
Khushwant Singh,
nonsense,
tenth rasa blogs,
Thinkopotomus
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How to buy this book!
The Tenth Rasa, now that it is being distributed through Penguin Global, is available anywhere Penguin distributes!
Click on these links to order in the US:
Amazon.com
Barnes and Noble.com
Borders.com
Also available now in the Freer/Sackler Shop, Smithsonian Museum. Click here.
And, now, because we are so hip, available in the MTV shop.
The book is also available at various online booksellers around the world. Click on the following links to order the book:
Abe Books
$8.42 plus shipping. Alternatively, you can buy the version with an introduction by Amartya Sen, for $22 dollars. I'd say it's worth it, even if it doesn't exist.
Eastern Book Corporation
This is the cheapest I've found on the web so far... $6.94 plus shipping
Akhil Books
$11.70 plus shipping
Oxford Bookstores,where we did a launch in Chennai.
Aggarwal Overseas book exporters
$16.20 plus shipping
NBC India bookstore
Price in rupees!
India Club$19.95 plus shipping, unless you order three!
In the U.K.
Blackwell Booksellers
£11.99 plus shipping
Waterstones...£11.99 plus shipping.
Tenth Rasa on Amazon UK
Indian Bookshelf
£10.99 plus shipping
Starpublic.com
£10.99 plus shipping
In Europe
Proxis.be
Is this Belgium? Golly... 19.95 Euros plus shipping
Amazon in Germany, for 15.00 euros.
um... Norway? Planet Zog?
Bokklubben. You know you lub it!
In Sweden
Getus your bokus here
In Japan
Amazon Japan
Also available on Amazon Canada for about $50! Holy Herr Gott!
If you would like to contribute to the Evil Empire, you can buy it here:
The Evil Empire
Click on these links to order in the US:
Amazon.com
Barnes and Noble.com
Borders.com
Also available now in the Freer/Sackler Shop, Smithsonian Museum. Click here.
And, now, because we are so hip, available in the MTV shop.
The book is also available at various online booksellers around the world. Click on the following links to order the book:
Abe Books
$8.42 plus shipping. Alternatively, you can buy the version with an introduction by Amartya Sen, for $22 dollars. I'd say it's worth it, even if it doesn't exist.
Eastern Book Corporation
This is the cheapest I've found on the web so far... $6.94 plus shipping
Akhil Books
$11.70 plus shipping
Oxford Bookstores,where we did a launch in Chennai.
Aggarwal Overseas book exporters
$16.20 plus shipping
NBC India bookstore
Price in rupees!
India Club$19.95 plus shipping, unless you order three!
In the U.K.
Blackwell Booksellers
£11.99 plus shipping
Waterstones...£11.99 plus shipping.
Tenth Rasa on Amazon UK
Indian Bookshelf
£10.99 plus shipping
Starpublic.com
£10.99 plus shipping
In Europe
Proxis.be
Is this Belgium? Golly... 19.95 Euros plus shipping
Amazon in Germany, for 15.00 euros.
um... Norway? Planet Zog?
Bokklubben. You know you lub it!
In Sweden
Getus your bokus here
In Japan
Amazon Japan
Also available on Amazon Canada for about $50! Holy Herr Gott!
If you would like to contribute to the Evil Empire, you can buy it here:
The Evil Empire
Sunday, February 18, 2007
Reviews aplenty!
Here is a list of links to all the reviews I've been able to find. If you know of others, please do let me know.
International Research Society for Children's Literature journal review, 2008.
Indian Express, 17 Feb 2007, by Mitali Saran
Tehelka, by Manohar Shetty, 17 Feb 2007
Recess radio show does a brief piece on the book.
India New England piece on Michael Heyman and the book. The first US press...
Also, Here
A review in Dawn, 10 June 2007
Express India, 3 Jan 2007
This one wins the award for most damaging factual error, namely that I was the one to invent the tenth rasa. It was Sukumar Ray!! Not I! Sheesh.
The Hindu, Buisnessline, 8 Jan 2007
Telegraph review
The Hindu, Metroplus Chennai, 10 Jan 2007
New Kerala.com review
This one wins the award for the most hilariously bad English and outrageous misquotes.
The Tribune, 3 Feb 2007 (also appears in The Telegraph)
Thanks to Khushwant Singh, who wrote this and other column (below) praising the book!
Hindustan Times, 16 Feb 2007
Business World, by Henry James Foy
The Sunday Tribune, 13 May, 2007
International Research Society for Children's Literature journal review, 2008.
Indian Express, 17 Feb 2007, by Mitali Saran
Tehelka, by Manohar Shetty, 17 Feb 2007
Recess radio show does a brief piece on the book.
India New England piece on Michael Heyman and the book. The first US press...
Also, Here
A review in Dawn, 10 June 2007
Express India, 3 Jan 2007
This one wins the award for most damaging factual error, namely that I was the one to invent the tenth rasa. It was Sukumar Ray!! Not I! Sheesh.
The Hindu, Buisnessline, 8 Jan 2007
Telegraph review
The Hindu, Metroplus Chennai, 10 Jan 2007
New Kerala.com review
This one wins the award for the most hilariously bad English and outrageous misquotes.
The Tribune, 3 Feb 2007 (also appears in The Telegraph)
Thanks to Khushwant Singh, who wrote this and other column (below) praising the book!
Hindustan Times, 16 Feb 2007
Business World, by Henry James Foy
The Sunday Tribune, 13 May, 2007
The Tenth Rasa is born!
Hear ye! Fear ye! The Tenth Rasa: An Anthology of Indian Nonsense is born!
As is this, the Official ("official" because, well, I was the head hippo) Blog of it and all things nonsensical.
As is this, the Official ("official" because, well, I was the head hippo) Blog of it and all things nonsensical.
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