I have been diving into books about foreign countries lately. My reading journey started with Tibetan history, moved to a Westerner’s life in Bhutan, and has now brought me to this engaging travelogue on Australia. While all of these books are several decades old, In a Sunburned Country is by far the most relevant to a modern context.
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Thursday, July 09, 2026
In a Sunburned Country - Bill Bryson (2000)
Friday, June 26, 2026
Beyond the Sky and the Earth - A Journey into Bhutan by Jamie Zeppa (1999)
Fresh from college, a young woman from Canada leaves everything familiar behind to step into the wilderness of Bhutan in 1987. What begins as a stint teaching school in remote villages—and later lecturing at a college—transforms into a life-altering nine-year journey. Along the way, she falls in love with and marries one of her students, converts to Buddhism, becomes a mother, and deeply integrates into the local life.
While the book contains many elements that might surprise a Western audience, a reader from India will find a deeply familiar landscape. The warmth of the simple Bhutanese people, their welcoming nature, and beliefs that closely border superstition feel instantly recognizable. Zeppa beautifully captures their philosophy of "live and let live" extended toward all sentient creatures—even rats and dogs.
Yet, the book doesn’t shy away from the harsh realities of the era: the intense daily hardships, the lack of basic infrastructure that a Westerner would take for granted, the strict teaching styles of Bhutanese and Indian educators, and the looming political friction between the people of Nepalese origin and local Bhutanese tribes.
Is this a travelogue? Not exactly. Bhutan today is a much more modern state, meaning this late-80s snapshot may not serve as a practical guide for a contemporary traveler. At its heart, this is Jamie’s personal evolution. Because she penned the memoir after leaving Bhutan, separating from her husband, and returning to Canada, the narrative benefits from a mature, reflective lens rather than the reactive mindset of a girl in her twenties.
What she ultimately portrays is how Bhutan profoundly shaped her identity—so much so that she continues to view it as home as much as Canada is. Beyond the Sky and the Earth is definitely a book worth reading, landing beautifully as a deeply moving autobiographical novel.
Saturday, June 13, 2026
The Revolt in Tibet — Frank Moraes (1959)
While going over some books on my bookshelf, I came across this one. A book written in 1959—who needs it now? It was my father’s book when he was a teenager. When I decided to pick it up for some in-flight reading, my mother quipped that if people saw me, they would laugh. Who reads such old books? The Dalai Lama is now 90 years old. China is an accepted superpower. Maybe in a few years, the world will fully normalize Tibetan affairs and accept Chinese sovereignty over the region, relegating this book to purely archival value.
Before that happens, I wanted to do some justice to it—to understand what actually happened.
Moraes depicts the Tibetan story with complete dispassion. He breaks down the Chinese angle, the viewpoints of the Lamas, and the temporary British arrangement of granting suzerainty of the region to China. Historically, Tibet was a militarily weaker state that remained a vassal to Nepal and China at different times; even the Dalai Lama had fled Tibet several times in the past.
The review of Chinese tactics is particularly sharp. The Chinese communists systematically used the Panchen and Dalai Lama positions against each other to seize control of the region. They also exploited class differences among the Lamas to argue that the existing system violated communist principles of a classless society. Throughout the narrative, you see geopolitics being deftly weaponized by China to justify their actions wherever it suited them.
India’s role, by contrast, comes across as deeply contradictory. Nehru accepted Chinese suzerainty over Tibet as established by the British, yet he refused to maintain the tactical arrangements—like intelligence gathering and military balances—that the British had kept in the region. He operating under the belief that a peaceful relationship with China would prevent them from ever becoming hostile. Fascinatingly, Nehru also believed that granting asylum to the Dalai Lama would help the Indian public witness the downsides of communism firsthand, thereby thwarting its progress within India.
Because the book ends right after the Dalai Lama’s exile and before the 1962 Indo-China war, parts of it feel speculative. Whether Tibet was the primary catalyst for China's attack on India remains hard to decipher here, but the book accurately predicted that Tibet existing as an independent territory would become a thing of the past. Today, 65 years later, that prediction holds.
The book concludes with a short interview between Moraes and the Dalai Lama. It captures a striking historical moment: it shows the boyish confusion of a young man who has just lost his homeland, rather than the serious, polished statesman we see defending the rights of his nation today.
Definitely a book recommended for its historical significance and its window into a pivotal moment in Asian geopolitics.
Thursday, May 21, 2026
The Gene: An Intimate History by Siddhartha Mukherjee (2016)
If you are interested in genetics and everything associated with them, here is a book that has it all. Siddhartha Mukherjee takes readers on an expansive journey through the history of science, tracking how we came to understand the very blueprint of humanity.
- The Foundations: Darwin’s theory of evolution, Mendel’s pea-plant studies on heredity, and the dark history of Galton’s eugenics.
- The Modern Era: The massive undertaking of the Human Genome Project and the complexities of gene sequencing.
- The Future: The influence of genetic data on stem cell research and its application to modern genetic medicine.
- For the Common Reader: It is difficult to see how to apply these dense scientific concepts to everyday life.
- For the Scientist: The explanations can feel too superficial, covering old concepts that do not entirely make sense in a modern context.
Tuesday, May 12, 2026
Broca's Brain - Carl Sagan (1979)
Carl Sagan was a household name in the late 60s or early 70s due to the TV series Cosmos in the USA. Cosmos aired on national television in India in the 80s. There is a general tendency for 80s kids to get enchanted by Sagan. Someone gifted the book to me in the late 90s. Yet despite several serious attempts earlier, I was not able to get past a few pages. Finally, I tried one last time, and here is what I discovered.
Friday, May 08, 2026
Delhi is Not Far - Ruskin Bond (1994)
Delhi is not far brings together essays, short stories, unpublished articles, excerpts from previously published novels, travelogues, poems, and finally a novella of the same name. The author provides diverse content spanning different periods of his life. You may encounter shifts in style and approach. If you read in chunks, these disconnects become less noticeable. Some stories may not have morally correct outcomes.
Monday, March 23, 2026
Room on the Roof - Ruskin Bond (1956)
Rusty, an orphan English boy of seventeen from Dehradun, fights with his guardian, who had managed him with an iron fist, and finds friendship with a few lower-middle-class Indian boys. They offered him food, shelter, and found him a job. Rusty stays in the room on the roof of the house of one of his friends. He teaches him English for food and shelter. Interestingly, he grows closer to the boy’s mother and falls in love with the married lady. Rusty’s love passes away in a car accident, her husband remarries in Haridwar, and abandons their son. Rusty finds the boy, who had turned into a rogue bandit in Haridwar. He cajoles the boy, brings him back to Dehradun, and lives in the same room on the roof.
Friday, March 20, 2026
The School Days - Ruskin Bond (2010)
This book is different. The author collects a few stories from various periods, some well-known and some not so. All the stories are of adolescent kids, mostly from their school life. I found the two Indian stories from the author interesting. The other stories were sometimes difficult to follow. One could attribute it to the lack of understanding of the culture and context.
Tuesday, March 17, 2026
Sri Vijayeendrateertha - The Invincible - Raja S Gururajacharya (2014)
While visiting the Mantralaya Ashram in Andhra Pradesh, I sought to understand the origins of a tradition spanning over eighty gurus since the 16th century. My search led me to the only English text available: a biography of Sri Vijayeendrateertha.
A true polymath of the 16th century, Sri Vijayeendrateertha was a master of sixty-four distinct art forms and an unrivaled debater. The book chronicles his evolution from a dedicated disciple at Mantralaya to the head seer at Kumbhakonam. It details his intellectual travels across Southern India, where he defended the Dwaita philosophy of Madhavacharya against the most formidable scholars of the Shaiva, Adwaita, and Buddhist sects. His influence was so profound that it transcended religious boundaries, earning the respect of Muslim rulers like Adil Shah. This work offers a compelling window into the intellectual rigor and spiritual heritage of the Madhava lineage.
Sunday, March 15, 2026
The Hidden Pool - Ruskin Bond (1966)
Laurie, Kamal, and Anil are teens. They would soon be graduating from school into adulthood. The association is of classless young kids who have fun without any social divide. Laurie is the son of a British officer. Anil is relatively well off, but Kamal manages by selling one of thing to people and studying in a night school. The class divide does not affect them. They share and care for each other all through. They discover a natural stream in the hills and call it their hidden swimming pool. They have fun together in beetle races, chase ghosts, and their adventure culminates in a trek to a glacier. Laurie finally shifts to England. Anil graduates from school and moves to Lucknow for college. Anil, in his final letter, lets Laurie know that the river has changed course, ending their hidden pool. Kamal is left behind and finds new friends.
Saturday, March 14, 2026
The Blue Umbrella - Ruskin Bond (1980)
A simple Garwali girl exchanges her lucky charm pendant for a blue umbrella from a few visitors from the town. She was enchanted with it and would flaunt it around everywhere she went. Her brother was supportive. The rich village shopkeeper also wanted that umbrella and wooed the siblings to sell it to him. But, they would not budge. Frustrated, he sends his assistant to steal it from the siblings - a plan that failed due to the brother’s alertness. The village took notice, and the shopkeeper’s business was affected. Finally, the young girl went to the shopkeeper on a pretext of buying some chocolates and left the umbrella with him. The shopkeeper keeps the umbrella, but he is no longer enchanted with it as a novelty and lets everyone in the village use it. Slowly, the umbrella sort of becomes a property of the village. The shopkeeper finds a bear claw, makes a pendant out of it, and gifts it to the young girl.
Tuesday, March 10, 2026
A Brief History of Time - Stephen Hawking (1988)
A Brief History of Time remains a timeless classic of modern physics for the masses. Written almost four decades ago, the book begins by tracing the history of astronomy through its modern interpretation in Galilean and Newtonian mechanics. It then moves into Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity before diving into the complexities of quantum mechanics.
Hawking uses the unified representation of relativity and quantum mechanics to explain black holes, which in turn help us understand singularities and provide a portal to the origin of the universe. In the later chapters, he justifies the need for a 'Theory of Everything'—a common set of laws that explain the physics of the universe as a whole.
While the author genuinely tries to simplify these concepts, some principles may still feel overwhelming depending on your prior knowledge. For instance, while string theory was explained in simple terms, I still found it challenging to grasp. Ultimately, this is a great read for anyone seeking a unified view of the development of physics, even if some of the scientific frontiers have shifted since its original release.
Sunday, January 25, 2026
Essays : Reflections on Success, Happiness, and the Meaning of Life - Thibaut Meurisse (2025)
- Values
- Morality
- Happiness
- Self-worth
- Success
- Failure
- Ego and Status
- Marketing
- Writing
- Making an Impact
- Striving to be a good person
—-
In a Sunburned Country - Bill Bryson (2000)
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