Friday, 22 April 2022

#CATCH22 , #AbsurdNovel

 #CATCH22 , #AbsurdNovel



Catch-22 transcends the war-novel genre in that it is an illustration of the absurdity of war, and even more so of life itself. Even in how the novel is written, with its mindless repetition of words, complex chronology, and circular logic games, Catch-22 defies convention. Pivotal events such as Snowden’s death are referred to numerous times until Heller discloses to us the full story. Heller’s words drip with the bitter irony of existence. What is humorous on page one becomes horrifying by the final chapter.

For Heller, the novel itself is Sartre’s chestnut tree, Camus’ boulder pushed up a hill, Kafka’s trial, Beckett’s unseen Godot. Catch-22 challenges our preconceived notion that a novel should follow a chronological line of action and that the conflict in a novel should be resolved. Heller plays with form; he plays with chronology and time; he defies convention in ways that are reflective of the schools of thought that were popular during his lifetime. More importantly, Joseph Heller’s novel proves that one can triumph over this existential predicament, as shown by the actions of the character of Orr, and less definitively, in the character of Yossarian. We can outline certain mythic structures within Catch-22. For example: Replace Sisyphus with Yossarian in Camus’ essay The Myth of Sisyphus. In the Greek myth, Sisyphus is punished for doing a few things wrong. First, he told secret information about the abduction of Aegina to people he should not have. Secondly, according to Homer at least, Sisyphus put Death in chains. Lastly, after Sisyphus dies and lives in the underworld for a while, Pluto grants Sisyphus permission to return to earth in order to chastise his wife. Upon this opportunity, Sisyphus is lured by the water, sun, and sea of the warm and hospitable earth. He refuses to go back to the underworld. Mercury, hearing about Sisyphus’ disappearance, goes to get him. As punishment Sisyphus must push a heavy boulder up to the summit of a large hill. When Sisyphusreaches this point the boulder rolls back down the hill to its initial starting place. This“futile and hopeless labor” will continue for an eternity, as Sisyphus must forevermore push his boulder up the hill only to watch it fall back down (Myth of Sisyphus 88-89).

Yossarian, the protagonist of Catch-22, faces a similarly Absurd situation. Stationed in Pianosa, a tiny fictional island off the coast of Italy, Yossarian and his squadron must fly bombing missions in the Mediterranean during WWII. Every time that Yossarian gets close to flying the number of missions required to complete his tour of duty, Colonel Cathcart raises the requirement. Thus, Yossarian is seemingly trapped, forced by Colonel Cathcart to fly bombing missions over enemy territory for all of eternity, or at least until the war ends.

A rule called Catch-22 helps Colonel Cathcart perpetuate this absurd reality. Catch-22 states, “a concern for one's safety in the face of dangers that were real and immediate was the process of arational mind” (46). Therefore, if you ask to be grounded from a mission you clearly are not insane because you understand the risks involved. Crazy soldiers can be grounded: all they have to do is ask. However, they will never ask because they are crazy and do not realize the dangers involved in each mission. There are many instances of this sort of spinning reasonableness,” but this example is perhaps the most important and frequently cited, as it, at the very least, is the “catch” after which Heller named his novel.

So how well does Yossarian parallel Sisyphus? The answer is: not completely. While Sisyphus embraces his absurd condition, Yossarian is looking for a way out of his. However, they both exist in absurd scenarios. Sisyphus must spend eternity pushing a boulder up a hill and watching it roll down again. Comparatively, Yossarian must fly a seemingly infinite amount of missions, most of which put him in the line of fire. Yossarian’s fate could end on any of his missions. Yet, if this does not happen and Yossarian survives the war, we must ask ourselves: “Does ‘Catch-22’ continue after the war ends?”

Orr, who represents the triumph over the absurd, crashes his plane on almost every mission. The men of the 256th squadron think he is either insane or just a bad pilot, and Yossarian even goes as far as to ask never to fly with Orr again. Little do they know that Orr is planning something brilliant. The seemingly infantile Orr, with crab apples stuffed in his cheeks, has actually been practicing landing his plane in the water. After the 18th crash,” Orr can make the plane touch down like a butterfly with sore feet. Then, after a long conversation with Yossarian earlier in the day, Orr’s plane goes down in the waters off the coast of Italy. Alone in a life raft, Orr drifts away from the rest of his crew, all of which survived the crash. A search and rescue team comes for them, but Orr has drifted out of sight. We spend the next 131 pages assuming that Orr is dead. Suddenly, with only four pages left in the entire novel, Major Danby enters Yossarian’s hospital room with some good news. Orr has washed ashore in Sweden, taking asylum in the neutral country. Orr is successful in combating the absurd; he escapes to neutral territory. This is unique in a genre of literature that is usually so grim. Perhaps this glimmer of hope is uniquely American. If there ever were a man who was perfectly made for combatting the absurd, it was Orr. Most importantly, he understands that it is impossible to fight the absurd world in which he lives; the only option is to leave.

Catch-22 contains layer upon layer of existential themes: the passing of time; absurd trials; life as a soldier; even the novel’s structure and prose style create a certain sense of meaninglessness that conjures up existentialism. Heller has created Catch-22 a new American twist on literary existentialism. The resounding hope at the end of Catch-22 can be starkly contrasted with the endings of related existential literature firstly, America has a notion of the singular American Rebel. These men embody the pioneer spirit and make a habit of getting into trouble. JamesDean and Clint Eastwood come to mind as prominent American Rebels of cinema. Secondly, after WWII America assumed the role of world superpower. Catch-22 was written during this period, and thus Heller would have, consciously or not, placed a bit of this gusto in his work. Thirdly, ever since its founding days, there has existed a sense of American Exceptionalism in the people of the United States. The Frenchman Alexis de Tocqueville wrote what would become the best account of the phenomenon of American exceptionalism in his Democracy in America, noting that America is indeed so exceptional that it is impossible to compare it to all other democratic nations. Lastly, the overriding optimism in American culture is reflected in the arts that stem from the manifest Destiny spirit that allowed so many to pack up and makes lives for themselves out west.

The most approachable representation of this American Existential touch is in the characters of Milo and his capitalist syndicate called M&M Enterprises. Heller takes the laisse-faire economics that America was mastering in the post-war years and uses them for absurdity. “Indeed, Milo stands at the end of a long American tradition of such literary con men” (Potts 75). From Melville’s The Confidence Man to Fitzgerald’s TheGreat Gatsby, Milo is one of many swindlers, hustlers, and gamblers on a long list in American Literature. We find it significant that Heller would link something so prized to Americans as Capitalism with something so European as Existentialism. Aside from the optimistic ending of Catch-22, this is the best evidence that Heller produced a uniquely American style of literary existentialism. Despite Milo’s humble beginning as a mess officer, he comes to power through shady deals with even shadier people all over the world. Initially purchasing food for his mess hall, Milo expands to weapons and minerals by the end of the novel. Heller inserts a hilariously rhyming sentence into a conversation between Colonel Cathcart and Milo on the topic of Milo’s lack of bombing missions (he mostly flies planes to run his business.)

“The cork?”

“That must go to New York, the shoes for Toulouse, the ham for

Siam, the nails from Wales, and the tangerines for New Orleans.”

“Milo”

“We have coals in Newcastle, sir”

Colonel Cathcart threw up his hands…. “It’s no use. You’re just

like I am—indispensible!”…. The whole system would fall apart if

anything happened to you. (373)

Not only is this exchange absurd in a stylistic sense, it is also absurd in a narrative sense. Heller has made a mockery of Milo’s beloved syndicate by suggesting that he buys and trades supplies simply on the basis of whether or not they rhyme with the original or destined name of the city. Milo defends his business contracts more than he defends his country. So many people are counting on M&M Enterprises—enemies, allies, mayors, soldiers—that Milomust stays in business so that everyone else can stay happy. Milo is just a hypocritical businessman, who, along with many others, built the American economy.

Heller portrays war as ultimately absurd. He does not provide political reasons or ideals for the war, what we learn about war instead is that it pays well, that it reduces life by constantly endangering it, that orders must be followed blindly and that the reasons behind these orders are aspirations, ideals, and eccentricities. Soldiers are not meant to fight, win and survive but they are expected to die, to willingly give up their lives without questioning war or its reasons. The fact that young men die for the old men in power, presented as it is in the novel, is not only illogical but also unnatural and absurd.

One of the first aspects of the novel’s absurdist vision to notice, apart from war, is bureaucracy. Throughout the novel, bureaucracy seems to be illogical, mad, and absurd. That includes the military bureaucracy on the one hand and the government on the other. As Gross puts it “the war in Heller’s novel is a vehicle for bringing the essential bureaucratic systematization that rules so much of contemporary life to its highest pitch of lunacy”[6]. In other words, Heller uses his novel’s war setting to portray a heightened and exaggerated picture of absurd and illogical bureaucracy.

Situated in the quiet 1950s, Heller accurately located the problems of the Age, attacked them in a low-profile manner, and, to some extent, foretold the breakout of the protest in the 1960s in the novel Catch-22. After a time of acquiescence in the 1950s, active social protests, for example, the civil rights movement, feminism movement, anti-war protest, and some counterculture movements at the end of the 1960s, broke out in a wide range. Thomas L. Hartshorne compares Yossarian's actions with those of the protestors in the early 1960s and states that both of them spot a limited and realizable goal of protest to make sure they can accomplish the goal. He says that protestors in the early 1960s "employed new styles of protest: the sit-in, freedom rides, direct action, nonviolent resistance, nonviolent resistance, the community organizing of the early years of the SDS, the idea of participatory democracy. At the same time, there was a tendency to avoid explicit ideological commitments and the discussion of long-term blueprints for the wholesale reconstruction of society"[251]. As the protestors in the early 1960s, Heller also employs new styles of protest. Instead of exposing the problems of society during the cold war in a harsh way, he chooses a seemingly lukewarm tone. But by the contrast between the shocking scenes and the lukewarm tone, Heller makes the effect of such zero-degree writing success in presenting the destruction McCarthyism and the Cold War brings to the American society in an ironic way. The irony and the implicit attacking ideas mark the novel ofCatch-22 with the characteristics of the 1960s. Conditioned in the 1950s and 1960s, Catch-22 bore the characteristics of both decades, the acquiescence of the former one and the protest of the latter. Conceiving in the 1950s when the intellectual sphere is under control politically, Heller took zero-degree writing to be acquiescent while he could not refrain from attacking it and does so in an implicit way, which conformed to the protest in the early 1960s and further led to the extreme ways in the late 1960s. By following a zero-degree writing style, he could defy social affairs while conforming to the social need of being submissive. His attitude in the novel represented how the spirit changes from submissiveness in the 1950s to protection in the 1960s. He rarely makes appeals apparently and composes the work by dialogues and monologues of the figures and objective description. On the unreasonable rules and shocking scenes which epitomize the real condition in his decades under the control of power and capitalism, he does not make comments to correct the corrupt and absurd values, frustrating the readers' expectations. At the same time, it is recognizable that Heller exposes the hidden problems of the institutions in a deliberate manner, no matter how lukewarm his narrative tone is. The tone in Catch-22 is marked by the spirits of the decades of 1950s and 1960s and records the transition from a submissive decade to an active one.

#Catch 22, Justify the title

#Catch 22,  Justify the title 



 Fifty years after its original publication, #Catch-22 remains a keystone of American literature and one of the funniest—and most celebrated—books of all time. In recent years it has been named on “best novels” lists by Time, Newsweek, the Modern Library, and the London Observer.

The term Catch-22 has become a part of our cultural lexicon, but what many do not know is that it is a term that author #JosephHeller made up out of nowhere as a title for his classic novel about soldiers trying to survive the bureaucracy of war.Catch-22 was originally entitled Catch-18, but the title was altered just before publication; another novel, Mila 18 by Leon Uris, had been recently released, and the publisher feared readers would be confused.

The Collins English Dictionary defines a Catch-22 as follows: “If you describe a situation as a catch-22, you mean it is an impossible situation because you cannot do one thing until you do another thing, but you cannot do the second thing until you do the first thing.”

It is a dilemma or difficult circumstance from which there is no escape due to mutually conflicting or dependent conditions. It’s also come to stand for frustrating bureaucratic logic or rules.

Heller coined the term in his book, which describes absurd bureaucratic constraints on soldiers in World War II. The book is set on an American airbase in Italy and tells the story of Captain Yossarian, a bombardier in the Army Air Corps who wants to be discharged.

The only way he can be discharged is by claiming that the war has made him insane. However, the camp’s doctor points out that Yossarian’s desire to be discharged proves his sanity. Yossarian is caught in a paradoxical situation.

The term is first introduced by the character Doc Daneeka, an army psychiatrist who invokes “Catch-22” to explain why any pilot requesting mental evaluation for insanity demonstrates his own sanity in creating the request and thus cannot be declared insane.

How does it first appear in the novel?

Yossarian: “You mean there’s a catch?”

“Sure there’s a catch,” Doc Daneeka replied. “Catch-22. Anyone who wants to get out of combat duty isn’t really crazy.”

There was only one catch and that was Catch-22, which specified that a concern for one’s own safety in the face of dangers that were real and immediate was the process of a rational mind. Orr was crazy and could be grounded. All he had to do was ask; and as soon as he did, he would no longer be crazy and would have to fly more missions. Orr would be crazy to fly more missions and sane if he didn’t, but if he was sane, he had to fly them. If he flew them, he was crazy and didn’t have to; but if he didn’t want to, he was sane and had to. Yossarian was moved very deeply by the absolute simplicity of this clause of Catch-22 and let out a respectful whistle.

“That’s some catch, that Catch-22,” he observed.

“It’s the best there is,” Doc Daneeka agreed.”

 Different formulations of Catch-22 appear throughout the novel, to highlight the absurdity of war itself. The term is applied to various loopholes and quirks of the military system, always with the implication that rules are created and used against those lower in the hierarchy, who find themselves in paradoxical situations.

In chapter six, Yossarian is told that Catch-22 requires him to do anything his commanding officer tells him to do, regardless of whether these orders contradict orders from the officer’s superiors. Later on in the story, Catch-22 is described to Yossarian by an old woman recounting an act of violence by soldiers;

“Catch-22 says they have a right to do anything we can’t stop them from doing.”

“What the hell are you talking about?” Yossarian shouted at her in bewildered, furious protest. “How did you know it was Catch-22? Who the hell told you it was Catch-22?”

 Other forms of Catch-22 are invoked throughout the novel to justify various bureaucratic actions. Yossarian comes to realize that Catch-22 does not actually exist, but because the powers that claim it does, and the world believes it does, it nevertheless has potent effects. Indeed, because it does not exist, there is no way it can be repealed, undone, overthrown, or denounced. The combination of force with specious and spurious legalistic justification is one of the book's primary motifs.

 As such for most of the novel, Catch-22 defines the maddening, paradoxical thought processes by which the military runs its soldiers’ lives; any time Yossarian spies a potential way out of the war, there is a catch, and it is always called Catch-22. Doc Daneeka offers the first explanation: requests to go home are only honored for the insane, but anyone who would ask to be taken off combat duty must necessarily be sane. Another example is Captain Black’s Glorious Loyalty Oath Crusade: men are required to sign loyalty oaths before they can eat, but they are not forced to sign loyalty oaths because they are always free to not eat. The officials reason that Major Major must be a communist because he has not signed a loyalty oath, but he is not allowed to sign a loyalty oath because Captain Black won’t let him.

This kind of thinking enables the war, and it permeates the novel, even in settings outside the official grasp of Catch-22. Luciana, for instance, will not marry Yossarian because he is crazy, and she knows he is crazy because he wants to marry her. If he did not want to marry her, he would not be crazy, and then she could marry him. The most penetrating explanation of Catch-22 is also the last that the novel offers—when the old woman outside the whorehouse in Rome says that Catch-22 indicates that “they have a right to do anything we can’t stop them from doing.” She says that Catch-22 is fundamentally inscrutable: the law says that those in power do not have to show Catch-22 to anyone, and the law that says so is Catch-22. This statement confirms what Yossarian has always known: Catch-22 does not really exist; it is merely a justification for the strong to use against the weak. It is the abstract mechanism at the heart of Catch-22, the mechanism by which the military can force human beings with the desire to live into endlessly dehumanizing situations in which they are likely to be killed. The unanswerable paradox of unearned power means that those in power can do anything that the subjects of that power cannot stop them from doing.

Thus the novel's title refers to a plot device that is repeatedly invoked in the story. Catch-22 starts as a set of paradoxical requirements whereby airmen mentally unfit to fly did not have to, but could not actually be excused. By the end of the novel, the phrase is invoked as the explanation for many unreasonable restrictions. Catch-22 has since entered the English language and can be understood as an unsolvable logic puzzle, a difficult situation from which there is no escape.

The novel draws to a close as Yossarian, troubled by Natelys death, refuses to fly any more missions. He wanders the streets of Rome. Encountering every kind of human horror-rape, disease, murder, he is eventually arrested for being in Rome without a pass, and his superior officers, Colonel Cathcart and Colonel Korn offer him a choice. He can either face a court-martial or be released and sent home with an honorable discharge. There is only one condition in order to be released, he must approve of Cathcart and Korn and state his support for their policy, which requires all the men in the squadron to fly eight missions. Although he is tempted by the offer, Yossarian realizes that to comply would be to endanger the lives of their innocent men. He chooses another way out, deciding to desert the army and flee to neutral Sweden. In doing so, he turns his back on the dehumanizing machinery of the military, rejects the rule of Catch-22, and strives to gain control of his own life. 

Monday, 18 April 2022

#Catch22 , #war novel, #protest novel , #surreal novel


#Catch22 #warnovel, #protestnovel  #surrealnovel



 

#JosephHeller is an American writer known for his novels, short stories, plays, and screenplays. As such his best-known work is the 1961 novel #Catch22, a satire on war and bureaucracy, whose title has become a synonym for an absurd or contradictory choice. Well as such Catch-22 is considered to be one of the most significant American novels of the 1900s.

The novel is a revolutionary work and one of its kind. In this novel, Heller uses a non-chronological third-person omniscient narration to bind the threads together. Ideas flow into each other through random connections within the story. Events have been repeated from a different points of view. The story is situated in the time of World War 2. This story is about the life of Captain John Yossarian, a U.S. Army Air Forces bombardier in the 256th squadron who has been assigned to bomb enemy posts in eastern France and Italy.

No doubt the novel is one of the most significant works of protest literature written in the 20th century and it has given an expression to the world cutting across all climates and cultures. Catch 22 has been described variously as a war novel, a protest novel, and most importantly, a surreal novel. While several attempts have been made to analyze the novel in Marxist terms and from the psychological point of view, up until today the surreal elements in the novel have not been explicated.

Surrealism has been described variously as a movement. Surrealism is noted for its unpredictability, inconsistency, its disregard for causality, and vividness of its images. Surrealism also includes an element of surprise. Well as such, Catch 22 does not follow the traditional style of narrating events where the storytime corresponds to text time. The fragmentary nature of the discourse is caused by disruption of order, duration, and frequency. While at one level the novel deals with a realistic event, which is war, simultaneously Heller, through his narrative, brings in a surreal element to draw attention to the devastation that the war inflicts on humankind. By refusing to engage in war, Yossarian gets metamorphosed into a true hero. It is in moments of cowardice, that Yossarian proves that he is the bravest of them all.

The novel is set during World War II, from 1942 to 1944. It chiefly follows the life of Captain John Yossarian, a U.S. Army Air Forces B-25 bombardier. Most of the events in the book occur while the fictional 256th Squadron is based on the island of Pianosa, in the Mediterranean Sea, west of Italy. The novel looks into the experiences of Yossarian and the other airmen in the camp, who attempt to maintain their sanity while fulfilling their service requirements so that they may return home.

 The novel generated a great deal of controversy upon its initial publication in 1961. Critics tended either to adore it or despise it, and those who hated it did so for the same reasons as the critics who loved it. As such overtime, Catch-22 has become one of the defining novels of the twentieth century. It presents an utterly unsentimental vision of war, stripping all romantic pretenses away from combat, replacing visions of glory and honor with a kind of terrifying comedy of violence, bureaucracy, and paradoxical madness. This kind of irony has come to be expected of war novels since the Vietnam War, but in the wake of World War II, which most Americans believed was a just and heroic war, Catch-22 was shocking. It proved almost prophetic about both the Vietnam War, a conflict that began a few years after the novel was originally published, and the sense of disillusionment about the military that many Americans experienced during this conflict.

Catch-22 also distinguishes itself from other antiromantic war novels through its core values: the story of Yossarian, the protagonist, is ultimately not one of despair but one of hope. He believes that the positive urge to live and to be free can redeem the individual from the dehumanizing machinery of war. The novel is told as a series of loosely related, indirect stories in no particular chronological order. The narrative that emerges from this structural jumble upholds the value of the individual in the face of the impersonal, collective military mass; at every stage, it mocks insincerity and hypocrisy, even when such values appear triumphant.

Winning a war is only beneficial to those who live past the war’s end. The book’s protagonist, Capt. John Yossarian was not willing to die for the war—and this is precisely what makes Catch-22 one of the most enduring and important war novels to date. It is a vicious satire of the war industry and a piercing reflection on humanity’s deepest secrets, but it stands out most for featuring a wartime protagonist unwilling to sacrifice himself.

Well quitting is not easy for Yossarian, either. In another war novel, wanting to quit the war would have made him a pitiful character at best, a cowardly one at worst. In Catch-22, it made him a hero. Heller painstakingly shares Yossarian’s internal and external struggles as he fights to quit in a system that only wants his sacrifice, so we can see just how heroic quitting is: “He stepped into the briefing room with mixed emotions, uncertain how he was supposed to feel about Kraft and the others, for they had all died in the distance of a mute and secluded agony at a moment when he was up to his own ass in the same vile, excruciating dilemma of duty and damnation.”

Such a comedic, distressing, deserter-as-hero narrative was virtually unheard of at the time Catch-22 was published. With Catch-22 Hellen breaks from the trend. In creating a protagonist whose nobility sparks from his desire to live, Heller made one of the most compelling statements of any anti-war movement to date: that an individual life is more important than the ideals of country, honor, or sacrifice.

Despite its World War II setting, Catch-22 is often thought of as a signature novel of the 1960s and 1970s. It was during those decades that American youth truly began to question authority. Hippies, university protests, and the civil rights movement all marked the 1960s as a decade of revolution, and Heller’s novel fits in perfectly with the spirit of the times. In fact, Heller once said, “I wasn’t interested in the war in Catch-22. I was interested in the personal relationships in bureaucratic authority.” Whether Heller was using the war to comment on authority or using bureaucracy as a statement about the war, it is clear that Catch-22 is more than just a war novel. It is also a novel about the moral choices that every person must make when faced with a system of authority whose rules are both immoral and illogical.

As such at the end of the novel, Yossarian lives. That’s the most important facet of the book: that he finds his way out of an impossible-seeming situation and saves himself in the end. Not only does he live, but he does so with virtue and grace. He even refuses a soft, safe, unethical deal offered by his superiors, which would get him out of the war in exchange for his silence on atrocities. Instead, he quits in his own way, against all rules and advice.Catch-22 reminds us that opting out of this life-threatening situation is noble. Self-preservation deserves praise. We should criticize the systems that ask people to put their lives on the line, not the people who choose to opt out.

Today Joseph Heller's Catch-22 (1961) is considered one of the most important American novels of the twentieth century. It was a massive bestseller that sold over 10 million copies, and it introduced a new phrase into the English language for an unsolvable conundrum or paradox. Catch-22 was ground-breaking because it was the first broadly successful American novel that offered a post-modern, satirical take on the Second World War.

Thursday, 14 April 2022

Critiquing Seven Contemporary Writers: Book for a Lifetime

      Critiquing Seven Contemporary Writers: Book for a Lifetime





Sharing a few moments -

#booklaunch #Ceremony of my fourth book -

#Critiquing Seven Contemporary Writers: Book for a Lifetime 

Chief Guest: 
Dr. Rajesh Kalariya
Principal, KSN Kansagara Mahila College, Rajkot 

Published by: 
#VedantPublications



 I thank all the authors that I have included in this book. Through their respective works, they have truly motived and enlightened me on my quest towards becoming a better me. It gives me great pleasure to write about the works of such authors who have a worldwide impact today and shall be an influencing force for the ages to come. I thank them from the depth of my heart, for the pleasure, insight and, encouragement that they have provided.

Ernest Hemingway has always been my favorite, his Old Man and the Sea, has touched my soul and always filled me with new hope, while Herman Hess and his works have always made me question life and its purpose. Works of Og Mandino grips my heart and as he gives a powerful message in these times depression and frustration, while Richard Bach describes the miracles that happen to men and women in all walks of life, the power of our subconscious mind and creating our own destiny with it. Dan Millan is equally inspiring and he guides us through examples and techniques that he himself follows, while Paulo Coelho makes me believe that everything is possible through the power of perseverance and prayers. Robin Sharma is also a writer that I enjoy reading; his words are simple yet powerful and have always motivated me in my life.

Well, in life we all desire and pine for health, wealth, happiness, security, and peace of mind. But the elementary question is how many of us have achieved these goals? The writers represented in this book write to share with us different techniques, processes, or modus operandi that heal us as well as guide us in becoming whole and perfect. Few chapters included here have already been published in various books and journals and have been collected together in the book at the request of my Publisher and friends.

 

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                              Mrinalini P. Thaker

                                                                                      

Tuesday, 15 March 2022

Resolutions for Women's Day

 HAPPY WOMEN’S DAY!!👸👸




Eight  Resolutions for 8th March Women's Day


1. Learn to also say "No" and not always "Yes"🙅‍♀️🙅‍♀️


2. Learn to also "Respect yourself" and not just "Others"🙆‍♀️


3. Learn to also be a "Woman" and not just a "Superwoman"👩🦸‍♀️


4. Learn to also have "Me time" and not just do "Overtime"💆‍♀️


5. Learn to also "Voice your opinion, Dissatisfaction" and not just remain "Mute"👩‍💼👩‍⚖️


6. Learn to also always "Be Happy" and not just make others "Happy"🙋‍♀️


7. Learn to also "Live for yourself" and not just for "Others"💃


8. Learn to also teach your son to be "respectful towards women" and not just your daughter to be "respectful towards men"👩‍👦

Friday, 11 March 2022

A Critical Study of Paulo Coelho's Novels

 

A Critical Study of Paulo Coelho's Novels  

 January 2014

माँ की कलम से

 


                                  माँ की कलम से

                                                

                                                     https://myvedant.com/product/माँ-की-कलम-से/

This book is a collection of beautiful poems written by Pushpa Krushnakumar Sharma, Dr. Mrinalini Thaker, and Pallav Thaker. Edited by Dr. Mrinalini P Thaker.


“Maa Ki Kalam Se “

2016

Published and Distributed by Create Space,  

Published and Distributed by  https://myvedant.com/product/माँ-की-कलम-से/

 Amazon International Publication

 ISBN:978-154418378