<p>The lockdown has turned many into voracious readers. <span class="italic"><em>Metrolife</em></span> asked a few well-known Bengalureans what they are reading.</p>.<p><strong><span class="bold">Vivek Shanbhag, short story writer, novelist, and playwright</span></strong></p>.<p>The author of the international bestseller ‘Ghachar Ghochar’ is reading the Kannada manuscript of a translation of Damodar Mauzo’s Konkani novel ‘Jeev Diun Kai Chya Marun’.</p>.<p>“I had promised Mauzo that I would edit it for him. It’s a beautiful novel about life in Goa, and brings out the tensions within a family. It is told from the eyes of a boy between his 15th and 18th years,” he says. Keshava Guha’s ‘Accidental Magic’ is another book Shanbhag is reading now. “It’s a unique book — about Harry Potter and the fan fiction around it,” he says. </p>.<p><strong><span class="bold">B Suresha, director, screenwriter, and actor</span></strong></p>.<p>He is reading ‘The Home and the World,’ an English translation of Rabindranath Tagore’s ‘Ghare Baire’.</p>.<p>“This is an updated version with notes. I got interested in the book after I listened to a talk by Girish Kasaravalli on Satyajit Ray. It is a book about nationalism and the right kind of patriotism. I hope to make a Kannada play out of it,” he says. </p>.<p>Suresha gets around five to six books every week. “I’m also reading a book by Purushottam Bilimale, another by Ajeet Cour, and Kannada version of ‘Sebastian & Sons: A Brief History of Mrdangam Makers’ by T M Krishna,” he says. Suresha has been trying to complete his play ‘Ondu Gubbacchia Saavu’ (Death of a Sparrow). “I am also reworking scripts written in the earlier lockdown,” he says. </p>.<p><strong><span class="bold">K M Chaitanya, film director</span></strong></p>.<p>Chaitanya just finished reading ‘Captain Corelli’s Mandolin’ by Louis de Bernières. “Girish Karnad gave me this book 20 years ago and it was lying in my library. It is a book about war and relationships, turmoils and trauma, and how humanity triumphs over everything. It is a classic and a film was based on it,” he says. </p>.<p>We need such human and uplifting stories at all times, but a little more now. The book helps one look at ‘fanatics’ in a non-judgmental manner, he notes. “A lot of my screenplays were left half-written. I have been able to finish a couple of them,” Chaitanya says. </p>.<p><strong><span class="bold">Samyukta Hornad, actor </span></strong></p>.<p>She reads two to three books simultaneously. “One of the books I just picked up is Charlie Mackesy’s ‘The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse’. It’s a book that makes one understand that only a few things are under one’s control and that most things aren’t. Accepting one’s reality is something one can learn from this book. I’ve been reading books like these, as I feel they are necessary for my mental health,” says Samyukta. </p>.<p>She finds solace in books and music and has been working with NGOs and service groups to do her bit during the second wave. </p>.<p><strong><span class="bold">Kavitha Lankesh, filmmaker</span></strong></p>.<p>She picked up ‘Out of Print: Ten Years: An Anthology of Stories’ by Indira Chandrasekhar. “It has short stories from various writers including my father P Lankesh, Shashi Deshpande, U R Ananthamurthy, among others. I was an avid reader earlier but my reading habit had come down since a while. Perumal Murugan is one of my favourite authors,” she says. </p>.<p>During the Covid-19 first wave, Kavitha had taken up farming in her space near Nelamangala and was baking with her daughter, but the second wave ‘has been frustrating’. “Right now, I am a volunteer with lyricist Kaviraj’s initiative ‘Usiru’, which has been procuring and supplying oxygen concentrators to people at home, and I’ve been trying to help other distress calls,” she says.</p>.<p>Kavitha has also started researching for an international project.</p>.<p><strong><span class="bold">Radhika Narayan, actor</span></strong></p>.<p>Radhika is listening to the audiobook ‘The Power of Now’ by Eckhart Tolle. “A friend suggested this spiritual book. During these dark times, it is a very relevant read as it talks about misery and disappointment, and how it is important to be in the moment. I will be listening to or reading the book again, as I want to grasp it better,” she<br />says. </p>.<p>She completed Priyanka Chopra’s ‘Unfinished’ and found it relatable in parts. Apart from reading, Radhika practices yoga and is busy with experiments in the kitchen. “I have been dancing a lot more and have taken up freestyle and belly dancing classes,” she says.</p>
<p>The lockdown has turned many into voracious readers. <span class="italic"><em>Metrolife</em></span> asked a few well-known Bengalureans what they are reading.</p>.<p><strong><span class="bold">Vivek Shanbhag, short story writer, novelist, and playwright</span></strong></p>.<p>The author of the international bestseller ‘Ghachar Ghochar’ is reading the Kannada manuscript of a translation of Damodar Mauzo’s Konkani novel ‘Jeev Diun Kai Chya Marun’.</p>.<p>“I had promised Mauzo that I would edit it for him. It’s a beautiful novel about life in Goa, and brings out the tensions within a family. It is told from the eyes of a boy between his 15th and 18th years,” he says. Keshava Guha’s ‘Accidental Magic’ is another book Shanbhag is reading now. “It’s a unique book — about Harry Potter and the fan fiction around it,” he says. </p>.<p><strong><span class="bold">B Suresha, director, screenwriter, and actor</span></strong></p>.<p>He is reading ‘The Home and the World,’ an English translation of Rabindranath Tagore’s ‘Ghare Baire’.</p>.<p>“This is an updated version with notes. I got interested in the book after I listened to a talk by Girish Kasaravalli on Satyajit Ray. It is a book about nationalism and the right kind of patriotism. I hope to make a Kannada play out of it,” he says. </p>.<p>Suresha gets around five to six books every week. “I’m also reading a book by Purushottam Bilimale, another by Ajeet Cour, and Kannada version of ‘Sebastian & Sons: A Brief History of Mrdangam Makers’ by T M Krishna,” he says. Suresha has been trying to complete his play ‘Ondu Gubbacchia Saavu’ (Death of a Sparrow). “I am also reworking scripts written in the earlier lockdown,” he says. </p>.<p><strong><span class="bold">K M Chaitanya, film director</span></strong></p>.<p>Chaitanya just finished reading ‘Captain Corelli’s Mandolin’ by Louis de Bernières. “Girish Karnad gave me this book 20 years ago and it was lying in my library. It is a book about war and relationships, turmoils and trauma, and how humanity triumphs over everything. It is a classic and a film was based on it,” he says. </p>.<p>We need such human and uplifting stories at all times, but a little more now. The book helps one look at ‘fanatics’ in a non-judgmental manner, he notes. “A lot of my screenplays were left half-written. I have been able to finish a couple of them,” Chaitanya says. </p>.<p><strong><span class="bold">Samyukta Hornad, actor </span></strong></p>.<p>She reads two to three books simultaneously. “One of the books I just picked up is Charlie Mackesy’s ‘The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse’. It’s a book that makes one understand that only a few things are under one’s control and that most things aren’t. Accepting one’s reality is something one can learn from this book. I’ve been reading books like these, as I feel they are necessary for my mental health,” says Samyukta. </p>.<p>She finds solace in books and music and has been working with NGOs and service groups to do her bit during the second wave. </p>.<p><strong><span class="bold">Kavitha Lankesh, filmmaker</span></strong></p>.<p>She picked up ‘Out of Print: Ten Years: An Anthology of Stories’ by Indira Chandrasekhar. “It has short stories from various writers including my father P Lankesh, Shashi Deshpande, U R Ananthamurthy, among others. I was an avid reader earlier but my reading habit had come down since a while. Perumal Murugan is one of my favourite authors,” she says. </p>.<p>During the Covid-19 first wave, Kavitha had taken up farming in her space near Nelamangala and was baking with her daughter, but the second wave ‘has been frustrating’. “Right now, I am a volunteer with lyricist Kaviraj’s initiative ‘Usiru’, which has been procuring and supplying oxygen concentrators to people at home, and I’ve been trying to help other distress calls,” she says.</p>.<p>Kavitha has also started researching for an international project.</p>.<p><strong><span class="bold">Radhika Narayan, actor</span></strong></p>.<p>Radhika is listening to the audiobook ‘The Power of Now’ by Eckhart Tolle. “A friend suggested this spiritual book. During these dark times, it is a very relevant read as it talks about misery and disappointment, and how it is important to be in the moment. I will be listening to or reading the book again, as I want to grasp it better,” she<br />says. </p>.<p>She completed Priyanka Chopra’s ‘Unfinished’ and found it relatable in parts. Apart from reading, Radhika practices yoga and is busy with experiments in the kitchen. “I have been dancing a lot more and have taken up freestyle and belly dancing classes,” she says.</p>