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1
TIMELINE F ive-time F1 World Champion Lewis Hamilton is no stranger to criticism, be it from rivals or overenthu- siastic fans. But the Mercedes driver seems to have found a trick to keeping his cool when faced with naysayers with Don Miguel Ruiz’s bestselling book, ‘The Four Agreements: A Practical Guide to Personal Freedom’. View criticism differently Fresh off his eighth win of the season at the Hungarian Grand Prix, Hamilton mentioned how the book helped him view criticism in a different light. “There’s an ele- ment in there (‘Four Agreements’) where it says don’t take anything personally, so when someone says something about you, it’s not actually about you, it’s how they feel about themselves,” [sic] explained Hamilton. About the book Based on ancient Toltec wisdom, ‘The Four Agreements’ focuses on the source of self-limiting beliefs, and offers a counter code of conduct. In the past, it has been recom- mended by author Deepak Chopra. ET The book that helped Lewis Hamilton deal with criticism 03 Books! Books! Books! There is no end to knowledge. All you need to do is flip through the pages to get that extra dose of infotainment. So simply read on... SURVIVAL GAMES, ANIMAL PLANET, 3.00 PM: Various species of animals living in wild and ferocious jungles develop unique strategies and tac- tics to survive and thrive. ROBSON GREEN GRAND SLAM FISH- ING, SONY BBC EARTH, 5.00 PM: Actor 1615: British Ambassador Thomas Roe landed in Surat to represent King James I of England to Jahangir. 1709: Creator of the first dictionary (English language), Samuel Johnson, was born in England. 1793: US President George Washington laid the actual corner- stone of the US Capitol. 1837: Tiffany & Co was founded in New York City. 1948: Operation Polo was terminated after the Indian Army accepted the surrender of the Nizam of Hyderabad's Army. 1967: Nagaland adopted English as a medium of instruction. 1976: Chinese revolutionary & chairman of Communist Party, Mao Zedong's funeral took place in Beijing 2007: Buddhist monks joined anti- government protesters in Myanmar, starting the Saffron Revolution. 2014: Emma Watson delivered an address at UN Headquarters in New York City, helping launch the UN Women campaign HeForShe, which called for men to advocate for gender equality. Robson Green takes on challenges in catching different fish species to claim the Offshore Grand Slam title. YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED, DISCOV- ERY CHANNEL, 7.00 PM: Smart and brave people use science to take their skills to the next level, from doing a wheelie in a boat to using inline skates off-road. OMG! YEH MERA INDIA, HISTORY TV18, 8.00 PM: The host takes the viewers on a journey to some of the unbe- lievable and exciting places of In- dia and presents interesting facts about the location and the people. HOTEL TRANSYLVANIA 3: SUMMER VACATION, &FLIX, 3.05 PM: On a lux- ury monster cruise ship Dracula meets Ericka, captain of the ship, who belongs to the family of Van Helsing that wants to destroy the entire monster race. G.I. JOE: THE RISE OF COBRA, HBO, 4.43 PM: Duke and Ripcord join an elite military unit, the G.I.JOE, af- ter they are attacked by an evil or- ganisation, Cobra. The two along with GI JOE use next-generation MOVIES ON TV TELEVISION THIS DAY THAT YEAR MUST DO MUST SEE SEPTEMBER 18, 2019 technology to defeat the threat. KNIGHT AND DAY, MOVIES NOW, 6.50 PM: June Havens meets Roy Miller, a lethal operative, in an unlikely encounter and gets entangled in his adventures. She falls in love with him and has to figure out if he is a traitor or a good guy. 1. ‘The Velveteen Rabbit’ by Margery Williams 2. ‘Alice in Wonderland’ by Lewis Carroll 3. ‘Peter Pan’ by J M Barrie 4. ‘Anne of Green Gables’ by Lucy Maud Montgomery 5. ‘Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince’ by J K Rowling ANSWERS WHICH BOOK HAS THIS QUOTE? 1. “Real isn’t how you are made/ It’s a thing that happens to you.” 2. “You’re mad, bonkers, com- pletely off your head. But I’ll tell you a secret. All the best people are.” 3. “The moment you doubt whether you can fly, you cease for ever to be able to do it.” 4. “I’m so glad I live in a world where there are Octobers.” 5. “Age is foolish and forgetful when it underestimates youth.” BOOKS “I never say never to anything, because I have said ‘never’ and been wrong” Atwood began writing ‘The Handmaid’s Tale’, inspired by George Orwell, in West Berlin in 1984. The author said the feeling of being surrounded by the Berlin Wall, with East Berlin on the other side, also formed the backdrop of her creation M argaret Atwood re- leased the much-an- ticipated sequel to her award-winning 1985 novel ‘The Hand- maid’s Tale’ recently. And going by the sales figures, ‘The Testaments’, is set to become a bestseller. A tale of dystopian times A terrifying dystopia set in the US in the near-future, ‘The Handmaid’s Tale’, has been adapted for the silver screen, and become a feminist rally- ing point for the #MeToo generation. It was nominated for the 1986 Book- er Prize; was turned into a film in 1990, an opera in 2000, and an award- winning television drama series in 2017. The show has boosted sales of the novel, which has sold eight million copies worldwide in English alone. In ‘ The Handmaid’s Tale’, the US has become the Republic of Gilead, a totalitarian religious state where women are subjugated. The sequel More than 15 years on from the events of ‘The Handmaid’s Tale’, the oppressive theocratic regime maintains its grip on power but there are signs that it is beginning to rot from within. In ‘The Testa- ments’, the lives of three radically different women converge. Two of them, Agnes and Daisy, grew up in the first generation since the new order took over – while a third – Aunt Lydia, wields power through the ruthless accumulation and de- ployment of secrets. Aunt Lydia was a character in ‘The Hand- maid’s Tale’, while Agnes and Daisy also cropped up. They are the daughters of the first novel’s protagonist and narrator June, who goes under the handmaid name Offred. When the new story begins, Agnes lives in Gilead, while her sister lives in neighbouring Canada and is appaled by the human rights abuses being per- petrated across the border. But the third narrator in partic- ular holds the reader in suspense: the Machiavellian leader of the Aunts – the group of women responsible for training and policing the handmaids. The reader discovers her past as a free woman and her transformation into a monster through her survival instinct in the face of tyrannical men, and her aspiration for power to get her revenge. Fact inspired fiction Atwood took more than three decades to create the sequel, inspired by ques- tions asked by her readers about the characters in the first book. The twist of events this century also spurred her into penning a sequel. Atwood said society changed after the Sep- tember 11, 2001 attacks, bringing in tighter do- mestic security meas- ures, such as screening at airports. “Once upon a time there was no security. We became more fearful,” she said. Atwood said she was also influenced by the 2008 global financial crisis and US President Donald Trump’s election victory in 2016. Recognition The novel is on the shortlist for the prestigious Booker Prize – Atwood’s sixth time as a Booker finalist. She has won the prize once (for ‘The Blind Assassin’ in 2000), along with a slew of other awards including Canada’s Governor General’s Award and the PEN/Pinter free-speech prize. She’s long been considered a favourite for the Nobel Prize for Lit- erature. When British writer Kazuo Ishiguro won in 2017, he said “I apol- ogise to Margaret Atwood that it’s not her getting this prize.’’ Atwood, who turns 80 in Novem- ber, said she is “pleased and grateful”,’ but unfazed. She has no immediate plans for another installment but has not ruled out a third trip to Gilead. “I never say never to anything, be- cause I have said ‘never’ and been wrong,’’ concluded the author. AP Here are key dates in the life and career of the award-winning Canadian novelist NOVEMBER 18, 1939: She is born in Ottawa, her father, a forest entomologist, and her mother, a nutritionist. 1961: Graduates from the University of Toronto with a degree in English. The follow- ing year she completes a Masters at Harvard- linked Radcliffe College, in the eastern US city of Boston. 1969: Publishes her first novel ‘The Edible Woman’, a satire about a young woman unable to eat after getting married. 1985: Publishes ‘The Handmaid’s Tale’, which becomes a feminist classic, about a totalitarian society of the future. It is later adapted into a film, cult tel- evision series and opera. 1996: Releases her historical novel ‘Alias Grace’, which is also adapted for television. 2000: Wins Britain’s top literary award, the Booker Prize, for ‘The Blind Assassin’ pub- lished the same year. 2017: A US television streaming platform airs the first ‘The Handmaid’s Tale’ series, which wins a host of top awards. In July 2019, a fourth series was announced. AFP Award-winning author Margaret Atwood returns to Gilead with ‘The Testaments’, the sequel to ‘The Handmaid’s Tale’ Atwood said a deterioration in women’s rights in some parts of the world, including in the US, prompted her to write the sequel Author Preeti Shenoy on why everyone should read more A s the author of several best-selling books like ‘Life Is What You Make It’ and its sequel, ‘Wake Up, Life Is Calling’, Preeti Shenoy has carved a niche for herself. She is on Forbes’ longlist of the most-influential celebrities in In- dia. Though she has been writing for as long as she can remember, the 47-year-old author says growing up she had never imagined herself as an author. Do what you love Explaining how she began her journey, she said, “When I was little, I would write in journals, diaries, and for college magazines. It really started as something I loved to do. Writing al- lowed me to express myself in a way I would- n’t be able to otherwise. I had absolutely no clue that one day I’d be in the position I am in today.” Do your research In ‘Life Is What You Make It’, Shenoy explored the different dimensions of bipolar disorder through the story of her protagonist, Ankita. She gets afflicted with the condition after a tragedy and the story is about how she combats it. Shenoy said the book was inspired by an exhibi- tion she attended in UK in which people suffering from bipolar disorder had created works of art. To write the sto- ry, Shenoy spoke with these artists, and their families to understand the impact of this condition. She also travelled to the National Institute of Mental Health and Neuro-Sciences, Ben- galuru, to research on the subject. Build your skills Noting the top skills that make for a good writer, Shenoy shared that all writers require disci- pline, perseverance, an affinity for solitude, empathy and observation skills. An avid read- er herself, she said one cannot write good sto- ries without being a reader, as it reflects in the quality of their writing. IANS+AGENCIES Better with Books: 500 Diverse Books to Ignite Empathy and Encourage Self- Acceptance in Tweens and Teens BY MELISSA HART This collection of themed book lists is a valuable resource for anyone who gets confused by what they should be reading. The lists, which include books published in the last decade, are grouped by age and themes. Wonderland: An Anthology BY MARIE O’REGAN AND PAUL KANE This compilation of stories inspired by ‘Alice in Wonderland’ includes a wide- ranging list of fan- tasy and horror authors, including M R Carey and L L McKinney. ADD THIS TO YOUR READING SHELF The author is among the top five highest selling authors in India and on Forbes’ longlist of the most influential celebrities in India Fabulous Monsters: Dracula, Alice, Superman, and Other Literary Friends BY ALBERTO MANGUEL The author explores how literary char- acters transcend the pages of books to influence the lives of readers. Discipline + perseverance = good writing

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Page 1: Books! Books! Books! There is no end to knowledge. All you ...nie-images.s3.amazonaws.com › gall_content › 2019 › 9 › ... · 1837: Tiffany & Co was founded in New York City

T I M E L I N E

Five-time F1 World Champion Lewis Hamilton is nostranger to criticism, be it from rivals or overenthu-siastic fans. But the Mercedes driver seems to havefound a trick to keeping his cool when faced with

naysayers with Don Miguel Ruiz’sbestselling book, ‘The FourAgreements: A Practical Guide toPersonal Freedom’.

View criticism differentlyFresh off his eighth win of theseason at the Hungarian GrandPrix, Hamilton mentioned how thebook helped him view criticism ina different light. “There’s an ele-ment in there (‘Four Agreements’) where it says don’t takeanything personally, so when someone says somethingabout you, it’s not actually about you, it’s how they feelabout themselves,” [sic] explained Hamilton.

About the bookBased on ancient Toltec wisdom, ‘The Four Agreements’focuses on the source of self-limiting beliefs, and offers acounter code of conduct. In the past, it has been recom-mended by author Deepak Chopra. ET

The book that helpedLewis Hamilton dealwith criticism

03Books! Books! Books! There is no end to knowledge. All youneed to do is flip through the pages to get that extra dose ofinfotainment. So simply read on...

■ SURVIVAL GAMES, ANIMAL PLANET,3.00 PM: Various species of animalsliving in wild and ferocious junglesdevelop unique strategies and tac-tics to survive and thrive.

■ ROBSON GREEN GRAND SLAM FISH-ING, SONY BBC EARTH, 5.00 PM: Actor

1615: British Ambassador Thomas Roe landed inSurat to represent King James I of England toJahangir.

1709: Creator of the first dictionary (Englishlanguage), Samuel Johnson, was born inEngland.

1793: US President GeorgeWashington laid the actual corner-stone of the US Capitol.

1837: Tiffany & Co was founded inNew York City.

1948: Operation Polo was terminatedafter the Indian Army accepted the surrender ofthe Nizam of Hyderabad's Army.

1967: Nagaland adopted English as a medium ofinstruction.

1976: Chinese revolutionary & chairman ofCommunist Party, Mao Zedong's funeral took

place in Beijing

2007: Buddhist monks joined anti-government protesters in Myanmar,starting the Saffron Revolution.

2014: Emma Watson delivered anaddress at UN Headquarters in New

York City, helping launch the UN Womencampaign HeForShe, which called for men toadvocate for gender equality.

Robson Green takes on challenges incatching different fish species toclaim the Offshore Grand Slam title.

■ YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED, DISCOV-ERY CHANNEL, 7.00 PM: Smart andbrave people use science to taketheir skills to the next level, fromdoing a wheelie in a boat to usinginline skates off-road.

■ OMG! YEH MERA INDIA, HISTORY TV18,8.00 PM: The host takes the viewerson a journey to some of the unbe-lievable and exciting places of In-dia and presents interesting factsabout the location and the people.

■ HOTEL TRANSYLVANIA 3: SUMMERVACATION, &FLIX, 3.05 PM: On a lux-ury monster cruise ship Draculameets Ericka, captain of the ship,who belongs to the family of VanHelsing that wants to destroy theentire monster race.

■ G.I. JOE: THE RISE OF COBRA, HBO,4.43 PM: Duke and Ripcord join anelite military unit, the G.I.JOE, af-ter they are attacked by an evil or-ganisation, Cobra. The two alongwith GI JOE use next-generation

MOVIES ON TVTELEVISION

THISDAY THAT

YEAR

MUST DOMUST SEESEPTEMBER18, 2019

technology to defeat the threat.

■ KNIGHT AND DAY, MOVIES NOW, 6.50PM: June Havens meets Roy Miller,a lethal operative, in an unlikelyencounter and gets entangled in hisadventures. She falls in love withhim and has to figure out if he is atraitor or a good guy.

1. ‘The Velveteen Rabbit’ by MargeryWilliams

2. ‘Alice in Wonderland’ by Lewis Carroll3. ‘Peter Pan’ by J M Barrie4. ‘Anne of Green Gables’ by Lucy Maud

Montgomery5. ‘Harry Potter and the Half-Blood

Prince’ by J K Rowling

ANSWERS

WHICH BOOK HAS THISQUOTE?

1. “Real isn’t how you are made/It’s a thing that happens to you.” 2. “You’re mad, bonkers, com-pletely off your head. But I’ll tellyou a secret. All the best peopleare.”3. “The moment you doubtwhether you can fly, you ceasefor ever to be able to do it.”4. “I’m so glad I live in a worldwhere there are Octobers.”5. “Age is foolish and forgetfulwhen it underestimates youth.”

BOOKS

“I never say never to anything, becauseI have said ‘never’ and been wrong”

Atwood began writing ‘The Handmaid’s Tale’,inspired by George Orwell, in West Berlin in1984. The author said the feeling of beingsurrounded by the Berlin Wall, with EastBerlin on the other side, also formed thebackdrop of her creation

Margaret Atwood re-leased the much-an-ticipated sequel to heraward-winning 1985novel ‘The Hand-

maid’s Tale’ recently. And going bythe sales figures, ‘The Testaments’,is set to become a bestseller.

A tale of dystopian times A terrifying dystopia set in the US inthe near-future, ‘The Handmaid’sTale’, has been adapted for the silverscreen, and become a feminist rally-ing point for the #MeToo generation.It was nominated for the 1986 Book-er Prize; was turned into a film in1990, an opera in 2000, and an award-winning television drama series in2017.

The show has boosted sales of thenovel, which has sold eight millioncopies worldwide in English alone.

In ‘ The Handmaid’s Tale’, the UShas become the Republic of Gilead,a totalitarian religious state wherewomen are subjugated.

The sequel More than 15 years on from the

events of ‘The Handmaid’s Tale’,the oppressive theocratic

regime maintains its grip onpower but there are signs

that it is beginning to rotfrom within.

In ‘The Testa-ments’, the

lives of three radically differentwomen converge. Two of them,Agnes and Daisy, grew up in the firstgeneration since the new order tookover – while a third – Aunt Lydia,wields power through the ruthlessaccumulation and de-ployment of secrets.

Aunt Lydia was acharacter in ‘The Hand-maid’s Tale’, whileAgnes and Daisy alsocropped up. They are thedaughters of the firstnovel’s protagonist andnarrator June, who goesunder the handmaidname Offred.

When the new storybegins, Agnes lives inGilead, while her sisterlives in neighbouringCanada and is appaledby the human rights abuses being per-petrated across the border.

But the third narrator in partic-ular holds the reader in suspense: theMachiavellian leader of the Aunts –

the group of women responsible fortraining and policing the handmaids.

The reader discovers her past asa free woman and her transformationinto a monster through her survivalinstinct in the face of tyrannical men,and her aspiration for power to gether revenge.

Fact inspired fiction

Atwood took more than three decadesto create the sequel, inspired by ques-tions asked by her readers about thecharacters in the first book. The twist

of events this centuryalso spurred her intopenning a sequel.

Atwood said societychanged after the Sep-tember 11, 2001 attacks,bringing in tighter do-mestic security meas-ures, such as screeningat airports.

“Once upon a timethere was no security. Webecame more fearful,”she said. Atwood said shewas also influenced bythe 2008 global financialcrisis and US President

Donald Trump’s election victory in2016.

RecognitionThe novel is on the shortlist for theprestigious Booker Prize – Atwood’ssixth time as a Booker finalist. Shehas won the prize once (for ‘The BlindAssassin’ in 2000), along with a slewof other awards including Canada’sGovernor General’s Award and thePEN/Pinter free-speech prize.

She’s long been considered afavourite for the Nobel Prize for Lit-erature. When British writer KazuoIshiguro won in 2017, he said “I apol-ogise to Margaret Atwood that it’s nother getting this prize.’’

Atwood, who turns 80 in Novem-ber, said she is “pleased and grateful”,’but unfazed. She has no immediateplans for another installment but hasnot ruled out a third trip to Gilead.

“I never say never to anything, be-cause I have said ‘never’ and beenwrong,’’ concluded the author. AP

Here are key dates in the life and career ofthe award-winning Canadian novelist

➤ NOVEMBER 18, 1939: She is born inOttawa, her father, a forest entomologist, andher mother, a nutritionist.

➤ 1961: Graduates from the University ofToronto with a degree in English. The follow-ing year she completes a Masters at Harvard-linked Radcliffe College, in the eastern US cityof Boston.

➤ 1969: Publishes her firstnovel ‘The Edible Woman’, asatire about a youngwoman unable to eat aftergetting married.

➤ 1985: Publishes ‘TheHandmaid’s Tale’, which becomes a feministclassic, about a totalitarian society of thefuture. It is later adapted into a film, cult tel-evision series and opera.

➤ 1996: Releases her historical novel ‘AliasGrace’, which is also adapted for television.

➤ 2000: Wins Britain’s top literary award,the Booker Prize, for ‘The Blind Assassin’ pub-lished the same year.

➤ 2017: A US televisionstreaming platform airs thefirst ‘The Handmaid’s Tale’series, which wins a host oftop awards. In July 2019, afourth series wasannounced. AFP

Award-winning author Margaret Atwoodreturns to Gilead with ‘The Testaments’,

the sequel to ‘The Handmaid’sTale’

Atwood said a deterioration inwomen’s rights insome parts of theworld, including inthe US, prompted herto write the sequel

Author Preeti Shenoy on why everyone should read more

As the author of several best-sellingbooks like ‘Life Is What You MakeIt’ and its sequel, ‘Wake Up, Life IsCalling’, Preeti Shenoy has carved

a niche for herself. She is on Forbes’ longlistof the most-influential celebrities in In-dia. Though she has been writing foras long as she can remember, the47-year-old author says growingup she had never imaginedherself as an author.

Do what you loveExplaining how she beganher journey, she said, “WhenI was little, I would write injournals, diaries, and for collegemagazines. It really started assomething I loved to do. Writing al-lowed me to express myself in a way I would-n’t be able to otherwise. I had absolutely noclue that one day I’d be in the position I amin today.”

Do your researchIn ‘Life Is What You Make It’, Shenoy exploredthe different dimensions of bipolar disorderthrough the story of her protagonist, Ankita.

She gets afflicted with the condition aftera tragedy and the story is about how

she combats it. Shenoy said thebook was inspired by an exhibi-

tion she attended in UK inwhich people suffering frombipolar disorder had createdworks of art. To write the sto-ry, Shenoy spoke with theseartists, and their families to

understand the impact of thiscondition. She also travelled to

the National Institute of MentalHealth and Neuro-Sciences, Ben-

galuru, to research on the subject.

Build your skillsNoting the top skills that make for a good writer,

Shenoy shared that all writers require disci-pline, perseverance, an affinity for solitude,empathy and observation skills. An avid read-er herself, she said one cannot write good sto-ries without being a reader, as it reflects in thequality of their writing. IANS+AGENCIES

Better with Books: 500 Diverse Booksto Ignite Empathy and Encourage Self-Acceptance in Tweens and TeensBY MELISSA HART This collection of themed booklists is a valuable resource foranyone who gets confused bywhat they should be reading.The lists, which include bookspublished in the last decade, aregrouped by age and themes.

Wonderland: An AnthologyBY MARIE O’REGAN AND PAUL KANE This compilation of stories inspiredby ‘Alice inWonderland’includes a wide-ranging list of fan-tasy and horrorauthors, includingM R Carey and L LMcKinney.

A D D T H I S T O Y O U R R E A D I N G S H E L F

Theauthor is

among the top fivehighest selling

authors in India and onForbes’ longlist of

the most influentialcelebrities in

India

Fabulous Monsters: Dracula,Alice, Superman, and OtherLiterary FriendsBY ALBERTOMANGUEL The author exploreshow literary char-acters transcendthe pages of booksto influence thelives of readers.

Discipline + perseverance= good writing