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Subrat SaurabhAuthor of Kuch Woh PalSuresh Subrahmanyan is a former advertising and brand communications consultant, based in Bangalore, with over 40 years’ experience in the field. He is a keen connoisseur of various genres of music, closely follows cricket, tennis and football. He takes a lively interest in current affairs, which serve as cannon fodder for his weekly blogs. A regular columnist in various Indian publications, his forte is humour and satire. Unsurprisingly, his favourite author is P.G. Wodehouse, along with several British writers, both past and present. He can be reached at - sirsub11@gmail.comRead More...
Suresh Subrahmanyan is a former advertising and brand communications consultant, based in Bangalore, with over 40 years’ experience in the field. He is a keen connoisseur of various genres of music, closely follows cricket, tennis and football. He takes a lively interest in current affairs, which serve as cannon fodder for his weekly blogs. A regular columnist in various Indian publications, his forte is humour and satire. Unsurprisingly, his favourite author is P.G. Wodehouse, along with several British writers, both past and present.
He can be reached at - sirsub11@gmail.com
Read Less...Achievements
This is Suresh Subrahmanyan's fourth volume of collected pieces dwelling on a wide variety of subjects. The topics may vary from politics, international affairs, sports, music and plenty of autobiographical reminiscences. The underlying theme and tone, however, will be unfailingly humorous and satirical displaying a deep and abiding love for the English language. Turn to any chapter and it will be hard for the reader to resist a chuckle.
This is Suresh Subrahmanyan's fourth volume of collected pieces dwelling on a wide variety of subjects. The topics may vary from politics, international affairs, sports, music and plenty of autobiographical reminiscences. The underlying theme and tone, however, will be unfailingly humorous and satirical displaying a deep and abiding love for the English language. Turn to any chapter and it will be hard for the reader to resist a chuckle.
This is Suresh Subrahmanyan’s third volume of tongue-in-cheek vignettes on a variety of subjects. There is no topic or issue under the sun that does not come under his genial and articulate gaze. He wields his pen, in a manner of speaking, with considerable panache and style. His love for the English language is amply evident in the way in which he crafts every sentence with minute care. He is greatly influenced by the British school of writing and the great
This is Suresh Subrahmanyan’s third volume of tongue-in-cheek vignettes on a variety of subjects. There is no topic or issue under the sun that does not come under his genial and articulate gaze. He wields his pen, in a manner of speaking, with considerable panache and style. His love for the English language is amply evident in the way in which he crafts every sentence with minute care. He is greatly influenced by the British school of writing and the great authors from that formidable stable. He is unapologetic about adopting a slightly old-fashioned style, as he believes the present generation who read (and that tribe is rapidly dwindling) should appreciate that this is the language of Shakespeare and Milton, without the likes of whom we would all be talking to each other with a vocabulary that does not go beyond words like cool, awesome, shoot, OMG and lowbrow slang like my bad, I’m good, and get a life, bro. In the author’s own words, “Texting trumps writing and language pays the price.” Suresh Subrahmanyan tries to make amends.
This is Suresh Subrahmanyan’s second volume of reminiscences and reflections. There is no subject under the sun that does not come under his genial and satirical gaze. Nostalgia and current affairs are dealt with in a serenely personal and free-flowing style, displaying a deep and abiding love for the English language. For the reader, there is something to dip into and find relevant, even at a random flipping-through of the pages. This is a book to be ke
This is Suresh Subrahmanyan’s second volume of reminiscences and reflections. There is no subject under the sun that does not come under his genial and satirical gaze. Nostalgia and current affairs are dealt with in a serenely personal and free-flowing style, displaying a deep and abiding love for the English language. For the reader, there is something to dip into and find relevant, even at a random flipping-through of the pages. This is a book to be kept by your bedside and referred to whenever you’re feeling low. Your spirits will surely rise.
Comments on the author’s first book of essays, ‘A brush with Mr. Naipaul (and other pieces).’
Make no mistake, ‘A brush with Mr. Naipaul’ is not just meant for laughs; it also nudges the reader to introspect on the issues assailing the polity.
The Telegraph
This enviable collection by Suresh Subrahmanyan, is an authentic reflection of its times, to be also relished as a mosaic of his Freudian anti-repressing liberation!
Deccan Chronicle
Charming, delightful; also a wry, dry wit and a fair bit of leg-pulling. Squeamish, scatological and porn-ish subjects have been tackled not frontally but forthrightly enough, in delicate, elliptical prose. The range of interests is wide. To write on all these pointedly but lightly is an art indeed. Wodehouse has been internalised and used deftly to capture a very Indian ethos. I doubt if anyone writes like this.
Kamala Ganesh
Sociologist and Author
Suresh Subrahmanyan draws freely from his life experiences to present this compendium of acutely observed columns. His métier, humour and satire, and his abiding love for the English language, resonate on every page. He delves nostalgically into his childhood, ruminating on, among other things, boarding school escapades and a wide spectrum of music that saturates his life. He paints a vivid portrait of India’s contrariness with a light brush, warts
Suresh Subrahmanyan draws freely from his life experiences to present this compendium of acutely observed columns. His métier, humour and satire, and his abiding love for the English language, resonate on every page. He delves nostalgically into his childhood, ruminating on, among other things, boarding school escapades and a wide spectrum of music that saturates his life. He paints a vivid portrait of India’s contrariness with a light brush, warts and all. Politics, sport, the arts, current affairs and selective autobiography – they are all grist to the author’s mill. As he himself says, ‘I write for fun. If the reader is amused, it’s a bonus’.
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Suresh Subrahmanyan is refreshingly different from others of his ilk. He is known for his eclectic tastes, partial to wit and satire, a cricket tragic (in Aussie parlance) and an aficionado of music of varied genres. Small wonder that he has been a regular columnist in leading newspapers. His writings, covering a wide range of subjects, come as a breath of fresh air. This delightfully humorous collection of his choicest columns, impeccably written, will lift the reader’s spirits.
N. Murali
Chairman, Kasturi and Sons Ltd (Holding company of The Hindu Group) and President, The Music Academy
Slowly, slowly catchy monkey Man does not grow old Read More...
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