Supreme Court issues notice to Gujarat Government on Jaswant book ban

New Delhi, Sep.1 (ANI): The Supreme Court on Tuesday issued a notice to Gujarat Government on a petition filed by expelled BJP leader Jaswant Singh challenging the ban on his book — Jinnah: ndia, Partition-Independence.

The Narender Modi-led BJP government in Gujarat had banned his Jaswant Singh’s book alleging that it defamed the country’s first Home Minister Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel.

“Jaswant Singh’s book questions role of Sardar Patel during the partition of India as well as his patriotic spirit. This is an attempt to tarnish the image of Patel who is considered the architect of modern united India,” a statement issued by the state government had said.

“It is a bid to defame Patel by distorting historical facts. So, the state government has decided to ban the book with immediate effect for wider public interest. As per the ban, there cannot be sale, distribution or publication of the book in the state,” it said.

“The book has been banned because it contains defamatory references regarding Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel who is considered as the architect of the modern India,” a senior minister in the state government had said.

The ban on Jaswant’s book came after he was expelled from the party during its Chintan Baithak in Shimla more than a fortnight ago.

Singh’s book, which has created a furore in India, is selling like hot cakes in Rawalpindi and Islamabad.

Booksellers in the two cities had imported more than 3,000 copies on Saturday and sold them out by Monday morning.

Not only intellectuals, but people from different strata of society have also shown interest in the book, in which Singh has praised Jinnah and described him as a leader who had strong faith in united India, while blaming Sardar Patel for the partition in 1947.

“I have never seen such a response to any author in about 30 years of being in the book selling business,” a shopkeeper in Rawalpindi told Online.

“My basic purpose of buying this book is just to know what compelled the BJP to expel one of its senior leaders having a long association with the party,” said a reader.

The sale of the book is good; in fact it is better than that of any other book at the moment,” said another Islamabad-based bookseller.

Earlier, a famous book store in Lahore sold 100 copies of the book in a single day which indicates how eager the Pakistanis are to know the reason what prompted the BJP to expel the former Foreign Minister and end his 30 year long association with the party.

“We had received 100 copies on last Wednesday. All the copies were sold out the same day. Now we expect more copies on Saturday,” said Rana Saeed, the owner of the shop.

Excited by the response the book has received, its publishers are already considering to bring out an Urdu version of the book.

Singh was expected to visit Pakistan to launch the book, but his son Manvendra Singh said his father has not applied for a visa, and as far as he knew. (ANI)

Jaswant’s book on Jinnah selling like hot cakes in Pakistan

Islamabad, Sep 1 (ANI): Expelled Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader Jaswant Singh’s controversial book, Jinnah: India, Partition-Independence, which has created a furore in India, is selling like hot cakes in the twin cities of Rawalpindi and Islamabad.

The twin-city booksellers had imported more than 3,000 copies on Saturday and sold them out by Monday morning.

Not only intellectuals, but people from different strata of society have also shown interest in the book, in which Singh has praised Jinnah and described him as a leader who had strong faith in united India, while blaming Sardar Patel for the partition in 1947.

The book has created furore in India, as the author has been expelled from his party BJP and reviled as a ‘Jinnah Lover’.

“I have never seen such a response to any author in about 30 years of being in the book selling business,” a shopkeeper in Rawalpindi told Online.

“My basic purpose of buying this book is just to know what compelled the BJP to expel one of its senior leaders having a long association with the party,” said a reader.

The sale of the book is good; in fact it is better than that of any other book at the moment,” said another Islamabad-based bookseller.

Earlier, a famous book store in Lahore sold 100 copies of the book in a single day which indicates how eager the Pakistanis are to know the reason what prompted the BJP to expel the former Foreign Minister and end his 30 year long association with the party.

“We had received 100 copies on last Wednesday. All the copies were sold out the same day. Now we expect more copies on Saturday,” said Rana Saeed, the owner of the shop.

Excited by the response the book has received, its publishers are already considering to bring out an Urdu version of the book.

Jaswant Singh was expected to visit Pakistan to launch the book, but his son Manvendra Singh said his father has not applied for a visa, and as far as he knew. (ANI)

Meyer’s vampire saga puts Wuthering Heights on top of classics chart

London, Aug 28 (ANI): American author Stephenie Meyer’s vampire saga has helped put Emily Bronte’s 1847 novel ‘Wuthering Heights’ at the top of the Waterstone’s classics chart.

Meyer’s ‘Twilight’ has made Bronte’s novel become famous among teenage readers, with the story highlighting ‘Wuthering Heights’ as being the central character’s favourite book.

In Eclipse, the third book in Meyer’s series, Bella Swan, the chaste love of vampire Edward Cullen, makes repeated references to Bronte’s masterpiece.

She compares the vampire to turbulent Heathcliff, as she quotes Bronte’s heroine Cathy.

“If all else perished, and he remained, I should still continue to be; and if all else remained, and he were annihilated, the universe would turn to a mighty stranger,” the Telegraph quoted Bella Swan, played by Kristen Stewart, as telling Edward Cullen, played by Robert Pattinson.

“By highlighting Wuthering Heights in her novels, Stephenie Meyer has introduced Emily Bronte to the Twilight generation,” Sarah Clarke, children’s books buyer for Waterstone’s, said.

HarperCollins, the publisher, has even printed a new “gothic” jacket for Wuthering Heights, similar to the look of Meyer’s books, to attract her fans.

It has sold more than 10,000 copies in Waterstone’s booksellers’ stores since May, more than twice as many as the traditional Penguin Classics edition.

A spokesman for the chain said that it was the first time Wuthering Heights had topped its classic books chart since it started compiling such figures in 1998. It has been number one in the classics chart for four months.

“I don’t think a vampire’s recommendation has ever sent a book to number one before,” Simon Robertson, the company’s classics buyer, said.

The surge underlines how important Meyer now is in the British book market. (ANI)

Alice Munro receives Man Booker International Prize

London, May 27 (ANI): Renowned short story writer Alice Munro has won the third Man Booker International Prize, beating the likes of Mahasweta Devi and VS Naipaul.

The award, worth 60,000 pounds, is given every two years to a living author for a body of work that has contributed to an achievement in fiction on the world stage.

The first Man Booker prize was awarded to Ismail Kadare, from Albania, in 2005, and the second went to Nigerian writer Chinua Achebe in 2007.

“I am totally amazed and delighted,” the Telegraph quoted Munro, 77, from Canada as saying.

Munro’s stories frequently appear in publications such as the New Yorker and the Paris Review.

She will receive the prize and a trophy at a ceremony on June 25 at Trinity College, Dublin.

Munro’s first collection of stories, Dance Of The Happy Shades was published in 1968 and has also garnered the Governor General’s Award, Canada’s literary prize.

Another collection titled ‘Lives Of Girls And Women in 1971 won the Canadian Booksellers Association International Book Year Award.

In 1980 The Beggar Maid was shortlisted for the annual Booker Prize for Fiction.

“Alice Munro is mostly known as a short story writer and yet she brings as much depth, wisdom and precision to every story as most novelists bring to a lifetime of novels,” the judging panel said in a statement.

“To read Alice Munro is to learn something every time that you never thought of before,” the panel added. (ANI)