My Books
This blog contains various themes of my book collection
6/25/2010
Indonesian Food
Title: Indonesian Food
Author: Sri Owen
Publisher: Pavilion, London
Year Published: 2008
In this landmark book, renowned author Sri Owen provides a unique insight into the ancient, exotic, and varied cuisine of the Indonesian archipelago. Over 120 mouthwatering and easy-to-follow recipes take us from staples and basics to food for festivals and special occasions, with fascinating introductions that place the dishes in their regional and cultural settings.
Sri offer enchanting recollections of the food and cooking of her youth, while delving into the historical role of food in the region’s culture and society. The recipes are accompanied by detailed explanations of ingredients and techniques, notes on availability and substitutions, and discussions of development over time. Filled with beautiful photography by Gus Filgate, this book captures all aspects of Indonesia’s diverse culinary culture and represents a lifetime’s research into both traditional and modern cooking methods.
6/19/2010
Hard Times
Title: Hard Times (299 p)
Author: Charles Dickens
Publisher: Peacock Books
Year Published: 2008 (first published: 1854)
The novel is set in the imaginary industrial town of Caketown. With a typically unforgettable cast of characters - the hard-headed fact-worshiper Professor Gradgrind, the heartless factory owner Bounderby, the warmly endearing Sissy Jupe and eternally noble Stephen Blackpool -Hard Times carries uniquely powerful message and remains one of the most widely read of Dickens' major novels. It is a bitter expose of capitalist exploitation during the Industrial Revolution - and a fierce denunciation of the philosophy of materialism, which threatens the human imagination in all times and places.
6/17/2010
Midnights's Children
Title: Midnights's Children (533p)
Author: Salman Rushdie
Publisher: Penguin Books
Year Published: 1991
Born at the stroke of midnight on August 15, 1947, at the precise moment of India's independence, the infant Saleem Sinai is celebrated in the press and welcomed by Prime Minister Nehru himself. But this coincidence of birth has consequences Saleem is not prepared for: telephatic powers that connect him with 1000 other "midnight's children" -all born in the initial hour of India's independence- and an uncanny sense of smell that allows him to sniff out dangers others can't perceive. Inextricably linked to his nation, Saleem's biography is a whirlwind of disasters and triumphs that mirror the course of modern India as its most impossible and glorious.
6/15/2010
Het Paradijs van Java
Title: Het Paradijs van Java (68 pages of photography)
Author: Wernand Kerkhoff
Het Paradijs van Java is a photographic album of the most easterly section of the Soemedang at Preanger land (West Java, Indonesia) on the early of 20th century that called by tourist at that time as “Italy of the East.” Here, too, the beauty of nature reigns supreme. There is, however, still much to enjoy here. It is here that the Sundanese live; here one meets a group of the native community which is interesting from all aspects. The Soemedang district with its industrious population, with its fertile rice fields, with its shady roads and its impressive mountain range of the Tampomas, is most a beautiful place which enraptures travelers who have visited the loveliest on our beautiful earth. A visit to the market or to one of the many villages lying scattered about in the landscape is a feast to the eyes. For these people to love color; their raiment is richly coloured and worn with grace, so that every scene from the life of the people has a wonderful charm. (Abridged from the preface of Het Paradijs van Java by Johan Koning entitled The Indies Beautiful and Interesting…..Wherever One Turns One’s Eye…..)
The Time Machine
Title: The Time Machine (120p)
Author: H.G. Wells
Publisher: Peacock Books
Year Published: 2008 (first published: 1895)
The Time Machine is a social allegory, set in the year 802701 A.D., describing a society divided into two classes, the subterranean workers, called Morlocks, and the decadent Eloi. The central character, referred to throughout as the Time Traveller, tells a group of friends that he has invented a machine which can travel through time, enabling him to investigate the destiny of the human species. In the year 802701, where he is temporally stranded, he finds the meek and beautiful Eloi living in apparently idyllic circumstance, but discovers that they are the prey of the degenerate Morlocks, descendants of labourers who have lived underground for centuries. In the later era he sees the life-forms which survive the extinction of man, and thirty million years hence he is witness to the world’s final decline as the sun cools.
6/14/2010
50 Facts that Should Change the World
Title: 50 Facts that Should Change the World (346 p)
Author: Jessica Williams
Publisher:Icon Books,
Year Published: 2004
From the inequalities and absurdities of the so-called developed West to the vast scale of suffering wreaked by war, famine and Aids in developing countries, this book paints a picture of shocking contrasts. Hunger, poverty and all kinds of material and emotional deprivation are recurring themes, alongside human rights abuses we may have hoped had been left behind in the 20th century. Read about unimaginable wealth, the decline of religion and the unstoppable rise of consumerism, mental illness, the drugs trade, corruption, gun culture, the abuse of our environment and much more. Each fact is followed by explanation and lively analysis. some will make you rethink things you thought you knew. some illustrate long term, gradual changes in our society. Others concern local issues that people face in their everyday lives. Jessica Williams reminds us that our world is deeply interconnected - and that civilisation is a fragile concept.
6/12/2010
Oeroeg
Title: Oeroeg (144p)
Author: Hella Haasse
Publisher: Gramedia
Year Published: 2009
This Hella Haasse’s novel first published in 1948. Oeroeg based on the experience of the Hella Haasse when she was growing up in Dutch Indonesia. Oeroeg captures the dilemma of those caught between the pretensions and culture of their Dutch homeland and their respect and affection for the native people of the colonies, and it has became a classic, with many editions printed. In this story, Johan, a European boy grows up on a plantation running and playing with his best friend, the son of the foreman, a native boy called Oeroeg. He is only barely aware of the gulf that divides them, but gradually becomes more aware of it as he leaves to study back in the Netherlands. When he comes home, it is as a soldier in the army, who are in Indonesia to put down the local independence movement. Not only is Johan grieved to be taking arms against Indonesians in general, and distressed at the racism of his colleagues, but he has reason to believe that his old friend is now a leader in the forces he is obliged to fight. He goes on a mission into the jungle to find him.
6/11/2010
Imperialism
Title: Imperialism (vii+183p)
Author: George Lichtheim
Publisher: Praeger
Year Published: 1971
George Lichtheim represents a vanishing species –a truly cultivated journalist, with an elegantly perceptive mind, whose forays into scholarship can put to rout professionals on their own ground.
Lichtheim trace imperialism’s diverse historical manifestations up through the present postwar period. En route, he provides a cogent explication of those concepts –nationalism, capitalism, liberalism, among others–that have often mistakenly been identified as integral to imperialism. With the deftness and lucidity that mark all his work, Lichtheim explores the writings on imperialism of such major thinkers as Marx, Lenin, and Luxemburg and ends with a scathing attack on the New Left, especially the Maoist. Condemning them for their naïveté and theoretical ineptitude, Lichtheim concludes “Marxism is too important to be left to the post-Leninist sects –tiny ferocious creatures devouring each other in a drop of water.”
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