New books to choose from
As we all know ‘knowledge is power’, gain some more of it from the new offerings of this week. Depending on your choice, choose any one you like
What's cricket got to do with helping leaders overcome the mental and other blocks they often face? Plenty, it would seem. Then, also examine the work of an award-winning poet that mediates on our follies in the world as humans. And finally, ponder over how caste still thrives in post-liberalisation India.
Here is the variety of options listed. Read on!
'Leader's Block – How Great Leaders Recover After They Stumble' by Ritu G Mehrish
For cricket lovers, here is an interesting analogy, writes 'executive coach' Ritu G Mehrish, who, in her most recent role, has run a multi-million dollar business vertical with 1,000 people across eight countries and five continents.
"When a batsman is out of form, he tries to block the ball instead of hitting big shots. He spends time on the pitch till he gets back into the groove. At times, we need to do exactly that till we get back into our zone," Mehrish writes.
This might ring true in the Western world, but how practical is the concept in the Indian context.
Plenty, Mehrish contends.
"We are dealing with people and they are same everywhere. Having worked across the world (including India), one thing that I have learnt is that it's all about human connections. As a coach I meet leaders from different nationalities and different companies and its fascinating to see that there is always a common thread in the issues and challenges they face."
'Rituals' by Kiriti Sengupta
Kiriti Sengupta, who has been awarded the Rabindranath Tagore Literary Prize (2018) for his contribution to literature, is a poet, editor, translator, and publisher from Kolkata. In his 10th work, he explores themes such as nakedness and depravity to point to the fraility of the human race through striking imagery that mark the passing of time.
Consider this poem titled "The Unclad God":
"There was a time I wanted to see naked people." "Women – for obvious reasons."
"Nude men affected me in many ways./Every time I saw them/I became conscious of myself/followed by a comparitive check./If mine was shorter/I'd run to my workplace/and read a memo to myself./It said size had nothing to do/with female orgasm.
Bare men reminded me/of my unkempt body hair,/how I had to trim and oil/to make it healthier.
"I don't look at unveiled people anymore./It's either my age or hormones./I now look beyond the flesh, bone and keratin.
"I've been told/the finer body dwells undressed."
Then, there's this prose-poem titled "Jesus": "How would a husband look in the eyes of his wife whose four-year-old daughter has been sexually abused by a male teacher in the school where she goes to play and learn? O teacher, how would you palpate the anatomy of your wife, I'll bet, only to raise a complaint on her chastity? But then, it's the world at large that believes in sex and how it spices up life or love, to be honest!"
'Caste As Social Capital – The complex place of caste in Indian society' by Professor R Vaidyanathan
Many consider caste as an outdated institution, but it thrives in post-liberalisation India. The establishment and running of businesses tap into caste networks, both in terms of arranging finance and providing access to a ready workforce.
In the book, Vaidyanathan examines the working of caste through the lens of business, economics and entrepreneurship. It interrogates the role caste plays in the economic sphere in terms of facilitating the nuts and bolts of business and entrepreneurship.



