Showing posts with label Mango Mood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mango Mood. Show all posts

Saturday, March 06, 2021

The Wagle's Goan Jaunt - excerpt from Mango Mood By Sharmila Kamat, Rupa Books, 2010

THE WAGLES' GOAN JAUNT 

Excerpt from MANGO MOOD 

by SHARMILA KAMAT

 

The Wagles' Goan Jaunt - a spoof written during the airing of the original Wagle ki Duniya that was shown on Doordarshan from 1988-1990. 

This is a fictional account of the Wagles' going to Goa for a vacation. This is when Raju and Manoj, the Wagle sons, were young boys. 

In the new Wagle ki Duniya - Nayi Peedhi, Naye Kissey, Raju, now a householder with two children of his own, wants to go to Goa for a holiday with his parents, wife and children. His plan is stymied when he injures his foot. 

Still, what is things had worked out different and the Wagles travelled to Goa for sun, sea, sands and serenity?

Would things be different this time around?

Here is a look at what happened on the last Goan Holiday:


                                                            Illustration: Naguesh Sardessai



 

Thursday, May 31, 2012

Sun Sand and Scandals


Once upon a time there was a land blessed with miles upon miles of sun-kissed beaches, a countryside of verdant splendor and a people who wanted nothing more from life than a “a homely home and simple pleasures, enough to eat and enough to wear.”

That was Goa, before the advent of the tourists.

They came in waves – the conquering hordes, eager to stake their claim to the virgin sands that hugged the coastline, hungry to explore the coconut tree-lined winding lanes that snaked their way through a countryside ensconced in a gorgeous cloak of foliage.

The initial invasion was driven by Flower Power. Roused into anger by the Vietnam War, propelled into protest by the student uprising in Europe, the rebellious youth headed east in search of Shangri La.


Tuesday, May 29, 2012

In the thick of the Mango Season!

Everyone is talking mangoes these days. Conversation nowa­days centers solely on the King of fruits in its various incarnations. Eavesdrop on two householders chatting, and you can be sure to count four Alphonsos, three Mancurados, and even a Mussarado, popping up in the discussion, all within the space of two minutes.
The Mango season has arrived.
At the start of the season, the man staying next door went to the market and bought mangoes worth five hundred rupees.
How many would that make? All of one single golden yellow specimen.
Extravagant, would you say? Not at all! For this was no ordinary fruit, but one of the first crop to arrive at the stalls, captured after a no-holds barred fight with six other hopefuls in the marketplace.
He took it home and cut it in three pieces, a slice apiece for himself and his wife, and the central portion for his seven-year-old daughter.
For a while, silence reigned as five hundred rupees’ worth of fruit paused for long moments in the mouth, then made its way down the gullet to find temporary residence in the stomach.....
.......

Sample the rest of the servings in Mango Mood by Sharmila Kamat, Rupa Publications, India






Available at:

http://www.amazon.com/Mango-Mood-Sharmila-Kamat/dp/8129117223/ref=la_B004KQMSCI_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1338349497&sr=1-2

and at:
http://www.rupapublications.co.in/client/Book/MANGO-MOOD.aspx


Some reviews here:

http://fachcha.com/books/4865/

and here:

http://thehungryreader.wordpress.com/2011/01/23/mango-mood-by-sharmila-kamat/




Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Goa served Sunny Side Up - a reading from Mango Mood on Goa's Golden Day

On the occasion of the Golden Jubilee of Goa's Liberation from Portuguese colonial rule, a reading of Mango Mood by Sharmila Kamat (Rupa Publications, 2011) at the Goa LitFest held at the International Centre, Goa.
Noted writer and lyricist Gulzar enjoys the tongue-in-cheek take on that part of India that till 50 years back spoke with a Portuguese accent.
Picture courtesy: Galileo Fernandes
www.goaartlitfest.com
www.internationalcentregoa.com



Wednesday, November 09, 2011

On Goan culture and society - with tongue firmly in cheek

“On the first day, he is not unduly perturbed, the taste of yesterday’s fish curry is still fresh, on the second day the memory persists-but only just.
On third day, no sooner is the idol of Lord Ganesh given a ceremonial immersion than he’s back to where he belongs – in the fish market, making up for the lost time.”
-from the book ‘Mango Mood’
The most common problem with reader is that he used to get addicted to a particular mood. Though there may be different kind of claims by author or publishers or readers of a book or author but the central theme of most of the books is generally one. Love or affection, technology or science, horror, conspiracy, corruption or any other the central theme moves around the one theme whether author does it unconsciously or deliberately.
Bringing out different shades and colours of life and society in a book through writing requires serious observation and presentation skill. When the book comes as a collection of writings the reading becomes more interesting. ‘Mango Mood’ is one of the books falls in this category.
Though the book heavily talks about Goan culture and society but despite it the writings presents different shades of Indian mindset. From fish curry to Ganesh Chaturthi, Wagle ki Dunia to modern politics, Bapu to Las Vegas, common family and social issues… author tried to talk about everything though in a lighter vein.


http://www.rupapublications.com/client/Book/MANGO-MOOD.aspx

Friday, October 21, 2011

Mango Mood: of people and peculiarites in the idea of India


Mango Mood
By
Sharmila Kamat
(New Delhi: Rupa Publications, 2010).
166pp. Paperback. Book Size: 5.1x7.75.  
Price: $10/-. Rs. 195/-
ISBN_PB: 9788129117229
This book chronicles the story of Goa, and India, in its recent past, as retold by a bemused yet indulgent Goan writer. Using mostly gentle, sometimes hard-hitting and always insightful satire, Mango Mood leads the reader through headline-grabbing incidents in Goa and the rest of the country in recent times using the medium of 42 short satirical pieces.
The first half of the book, “A Goan Pot-Pourrie” concerns itself with all things Goan – from the melee that follows the arrival of the first crop of Mancurados to the vegetable market to the game of musical chairs that passes for democracy in amchem Goem. It beams approvingly at the extraordinary leap in the number of wordsmiths penning tomes on Goan history even as it purses its lips in disapproval at the urge to purge Goa of its green and shining shawl shown by wannabe real estate pashas who are then driven by an equally strong urge to splurge the self-same riches on the many floating gaming houses on the River Mandovi.
The piece-de-resistance of the book is a history of Goa retold, from its birth at the hands of Lord Parashurama, through the 451 year long Portuguese interlude, to its status, in the Golden Jubilee year of its Liberation, as the undisputed party capital of an aspiring superpower. En route, the trip from eternity to here takes frequent detours – here to comment on Goa’s propensity to mend sundered hearts, there to smile indulgently at the Goan love for fish, fun and feni.
In the second half of the book, “With a Dash of Garam Masala,” the cast of characters expands to include personalities, and events, across India. There’s the reverent nod to the Indian street, that microcosm of Indian life ‘where everything happens – people eat, sleep, cook, and fight on it,’ to quote tennis great Boris Becker. There’s the shudder of apprehension as one contemplates modern air travel with terrorism fast overtaking tourism as the preferred religion of the frequent flyers. There’s the look of baffled awe at the manner in which the results of a Lok Sabha election so closely resemble Quantum Mechanics. Unpredictable? Check. Uncertainty? You cannot get chancier than this. And, yes, let us not forget the amused glance in the direction of a burgeoning population of socialites, social climbers and desperate-to-mingle social animals whose ‘lives are finished’ if they fail to appear on Page Three of the next day’s paper, ‘This is the Life’ writ large on their faces and ‘A good time was had by all’ engraved in bold on the captions accompanying their pictures.
A collection of tongue-in-cheek pieces gleaned from articles that had appeared in the local press and fresh observations on the world around us, Mango Mood presents an up, close and personal account of the part of India that once spoke with a Portuguese accent and the India that seeks to adopt the global tongue. Like the King of Fruits whose soft exterior belies the hard core at the centre, this light-hearted account conceals pertinent comments on certain hard realities in our society. Besides, can there be a better symbol for Goa than the luscious, mouth-watering mango? 
The appeal of Mango Mood is enhanced by apt illustrations that succinctly bring alive the punch line of each story. This humorous, thought-provoking and elegantly designed book will offer stimulating reading for the general public. Published by Rupa Publications (India) Pvt. Ltd., New Delhi, the book, which is priced at Rs 195/- in India and $10/- abroad, is available at all major bookstores in Goa, as also online from the publisher’s website. Its ISBN no. is 9788129117229.