In the words of Joe Dassin: 'Il y a tout ce que vous voulez aux Champs-Élysées.' Basically, 'there's everything you want at the Champs-Élysées.' I can't reckon any specific song addressed to 'Rajpath' saying it has everything you want (unless the list includes power, history, pride or ice creams, helium balloons and glittering toys). The former boasts of high end stores that mock your purses at times, while the latter gives you an occasion to assume that while you take a bite of your orange candy, the head of the state is perhaps also relishing his dessert just at the other end of the same road. The Champs-Élysées and the Rajpath are two pathways that are held dear by the capital cities of France and India and their people for being extravagant promenades of history, architecture, culture and democracy. But more importantly, these are New Delhi's and Paris' most 'happening' spaces. These are public spaces that resemble each other like no ...

# happy birthday sir,
ReplyDeleteit must be a good book.....right now, without reading the book, it doesn't feel very fascinating to read the review but soon will read this book and your review too..
but i wonder, four pages of review...is big deal..was it compulsion / homework like thing or you did it out of interest, although, i have been through your old reviews too..of movies .. i am also bit interested in reviewing movies and books..but i dont think i am good at it. i am sure that people use to do it out of passion because noone compels us to write review.
are there any tips or things to keep in mind while writing review..?just curious
is it neccesay for its language to be so lucid, attractive like book itself, can one review, in simplistic way too or not? like as a layman type