Reviews

The Blue Book: A Writer's Journal by Amitava Kumar

futurenaut09's review

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adventurous emotional funny reflective fast-paced

4.0

preethijoseph's review

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4.0


The Blue Book by Amitav Ghosh is a beautiful journal . It takes us through the life and loss and pandemic times.It is indeed a journal of the pandemic and makes us think back to lives lost and lives that changed therefore. It has emotions and feelings that can be empathised by anyone. The book has some lovely illustrations, paintings of what he says in his mundane life during the pandemic, travel, people he meets, places he goes, and how he adds colors to them. It's all woven together to form a warm blanket you want to hug and keep safe. This book will make you appreciate the small things and be grateful for what you have in life. It is a gem - a must read book with raw and unfiltered emotions

soshivaniofher's review

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5.0

how exquisite. this book has been so comforting to read. as a fellow (albeit irregular) journal keeper, the act of sharing your private thoughts to the public space is quite bold and mr amitava doesn’t shy away from doing so.
the blue book helps us navigate the life post pandemic. he gave us a concrete evidence of what we all collectively suffered through in the covid struck world. and his paintings are well icing on this bittersweet cake.
my particularly fav parts of the text all include his sweet anecdotes with his kids.

khamakhaaaa's review

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5.0



In this book, Amitava Kumar opens the doors to his inner world for the readers. The entries and paintings feel like a lonely summer afternoon; the heart takes pleasure in the games of shadows and stings with pain under the force of sunlight. His writing shines as a red post office box would, odd in these times and yet familiar. His paintings so impressionistic that you feel them under your skin.

Kumar writes very gently, even when writing about violence, grief, or lynching which can make one passionate. The smoke of words rises in his style not from explosives or bullets but from an incense stick.

I felt I was listening to a familiar elder talk, someone I know intimately. He does not preach much about writing but his work itself makes him a model for anyone with even a slight streak for writing. He is a model for anyone aspiring to break the moulds of a genre and come up with something personal, something original.

Take some time out for yourself and read this book. For yourself. Reading ’The Blue Book’ was like looking at a reflection of myself on a textured surface—I am there sometimes, at other times I am missing completely.

swee_p's review

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reflective medium-paced

3.0

deepan2486's review

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Reading is almost always a predecessor of slow, brewing writing. The afternoons in which you write are strange ones, where even the most dingy patches tagging along start to seem evocatively humanised.

There were times while reading ‘The Blue Book’ that I wanted to keep it aside and fall asleep. Waking up, I would find myself swapping through the thick pages, gazing at the paintings more than reading the text, oddly transfixed and lost in thought, mostly of something else. Something else. I stopped keeping count of all the something else-s I thought about while reading and watching this book. I say watching because it’s just that, this book. Deeply comforting, with equal measurements of passages that tinted me with boredom. Yet, I came back. Soon enough. Mostly when I was alone. At around the fifty seventh page— the word ‘around’ doesn’t make sense as I’ve already gone back and checked that it is indeed page fifty seven—I rummaged through the drawer alongside my study table to retrieve a set of fluorescent, transparent set of sticky book-tabs that suddenly seemed attractive. I annotated. Stuck such a tab on the length of that page, and took a neon green colour-pencil from my pencil pouch and underlined the lines that struck me. Very momentary, almost impulsive. But so alive. So scintillating. In the next hour I went back from page fifty seven to page one, in reverse order reading the pages again and glueing more sticky pages of more colours into those abandoned but new-found pages, green pencil at hand and another purple one for better clarity. It felt so calming, like being able to read again.

The day that I finished the last chunk of the book, I left the sticky tabs aside—peeled some of them, felt the glue glistening on the sticky side, played with my fingers but then crumpled them and kept them aside. That day annotating felt alien. Marking seemed futile, but inaction seemed so versatile. Kumar’s book hit the crescendo at about three-fifth of the book where he delves into his writing process—‘process’ is a lazy word, it read more like an yearning. I loved it, read and re-read some of the passages, felt the need to again bring back the neon green pencil but I didn’t. I suddenly found three pages at stretch that were shockingly bland after the wordplay I had grown accustomed to. Drowsiness called again, did I sleep? Perhaps. This time too after some hours I was again in the book, flipping the coloured paintings of gouache on newspaper cuttings, the bright colours so exciting to see, thinking about all the things I could have drawn on my own journal—but didn’t. All the waves I would have stirred within my diary, but didn’t. But thankfully Amitava Kumar did, maybe more.

I do not know why this is called a ‘Blue Book’—although there’s a hint at one point in the book. There’s a lot of thought in this book, a lot of grassroot-level sharp intellect and also sweeping vastness. So much honesty, and so unusually effortless—that it glides above the want of the readers occasionally. Nevertheless you become a part of these journalistic entries—you become privy to so much beautiful weaving in this world, some pure satin, some fermented scrap. You want to hold this book close, and closer.

Thanks HarperCollins India for the copy.
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