Which is the autobiography of nehru
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Nehru Jawaharlal. AmazingBuy 4. Frequently Bought Together. An Autobiography. The Discovery of India. Glimpses of World History. Add 3 Items to Cart. Rate Product. An essential read. It is a real boon for us to understand all his ideals. Letters from a Father to His Daughter: A collection of 30 letters by Nehru in to his then year-old daughter Indira, they were educational pieces on natural and human history.
Indira Gandhi, at that time, was studying in Mussoorie while Nehru was in Allahabad. Nehru: A Political Biography: Written by Michaell Brecher, and first published in , the book, apart from being a biography of the leader is also a political history of India over the forty years of Nehru's involvement in the freedom movement and the politics of the formative years of Indian nationhood. Nehru: The Invention Of India: Written by Sashi Tharoor, the short biography is an exploration of one of twentieth-century nationalism's great figures.
This can be enjoyable at times, but the book was- I think- a bit too long, and these sections can sometimes drag. The repeated analyses of Gandhi, and the contradictory elements of his thought, grew tiresome as well. Nehru is not uncritical of Gandhi and the Congress in this book, and one section in particular is very harsh on Gandhi's quite strange views on economics and society.
However, one gets the sense that Nehru was unable to convert his criticisms into action- he always remained a loyal disciple of Gandhi and a staunch partisan for the Congress, even as he admitted there deep differences in outlook between them, and that stifled his career as a result.
One cannot help but wonder what could have been had he allowed his radicalism to lead him to a break with the Congress. Perhaps he would have become an isolated political figure, and someone worse would have emerged to lead India after independence.
It's hard to say, but his admissions of a sense of isolation and ideological discontent amidst his peers makes it hard not to speculate. Suffice it to say, if one is looking for a deeply personal account of the Indian independence movement, I do not know if many works can compare. Sitting alone, wrapped in my thoughts, how many seasons I have seen go by, following one another into oblivion! How many moons I have watched wax and wane, and the pageant of the stars moving along inexorably and majestically!
How many yesterdays of my youth lie buried here! Sometimes I see the ghosts of these dead yesterdays rise up, bringing poignant memories, and whispering to me: 'Was it worth while? May 25, Jamie rated it really liked it. A bright, thoughtful, lively, insightful and passionate individual, not presented with all the answers in life, but with a strong curiosity to learn.
I was moved by his reflections on marriage, religion, colonialism, nature and life. More and more I have looked upon life as an ad A bright, thoughtful, lively, insightful and passionate individual, not presented with all the answers in life, but with a strong curiosity to learn. More and more I have looked upon life as an adventure of absorbing interest, where there is so much to learn, so much to do. I have continually had a feeling of growing up, and that feeling is still with me and gives a zest to my activities as well as to the reading of books, and generally makes life worth while.
Often it is difficult to know which is the right path; it is easier sometimes to know what is not right, and to avoid that is something after all. Oct 01, Sayantan Dasgupta rated it did not like it. Never mind! Wasn't expecting anything fruitful. Dec 23, Ravi Prakash rated it it was amazing. Took me almost one month to complete this book. I have always been in love of the writing style of Nehru. The whole book is just the chronological description of various aspect of Indian freedom struggle.
Nehru has shared his personal family life also. Well, in this autobiography, Nehru has presented Gandhiji as the hero of the Indian freedom struggle, while for the self he accepted the role of side hero. The only woman who has tremendous effect on him is Kamla Nehru, his wife. In this book, Neh Took me almost one month to complete this book. In this book, Nehru has accepted that he didn't agree with Gandhiji on many things like sex, morality, villeges, industry, fasting etc; yet he adored him very much.
Nehru describes his life journey only till , because after that he was freed from the jail and the manuscript was sent to publishers. I started this book, with great anticipation to look at the pieces of Indo Pak history and condition of India Pre Partitioned , though it give a great deal of light on the personality and life of Mr.
Nehru, yet it seized to give a account of the situation. It shows how hollow the thinking of those leaders of Congress. They were split and they all were having different dimensions, yet the course of history made them hero. I do give respect to the suffering they went into due to the cause of indep I started this book, with great anticipation to look at the pieces of Indo Pak history and condition of India Pre Partitioned , though it give a great deal of light on the personality and life of Mr.
I do give respect to the suffering they went into due to the cause of independence, but yet I am force to conclude that there were confused, and that is the reason still India and Pakistan are copping up with the situation.
Its more on the history of India. A better way to learn history of India during the independence struggle. Sep 10, Razi Shaikh rated it it was amazing. She uses a curiously accurate term for Pandit Nehru, as someone who was 'a poet of nationhood. Here's a telling excerpt from the same. I've become quite a queer mixture of the East and the West, out of place everywhere, at home nowhere They're both part of me, and though they help both in the East and the West, they also create in me a feeling of spiritual loneliness not only in public activities but in life itself.
I'm a stranger and alien in the West. I cannot be of it. But in my own country also, sometimes, I have an exile's feeling. The distant mountains seem easy of access and climbing the top beckons, but as one approaches, difficulties emerge, and the higher one goes, the more laborious becomes the journey and the summit recedes into the clouds.
Yet the climbing is worth the effort and has its own joy and satisfaction. Perhaps it is the struggle that gives value to life, not so much the ultimate result. Often it is difficult to know which is the right path, it is easier to know sometime what is not right, and to avoid that is something after all.
If I may quote, with all humility, the last words of the great Socrates: "I know nothing what death is - it may be a good thing and I'm not afraid of it. But I do know it is a bad thing to desert one's past, and I prefer what may be good, to what I know to be bad.
Sitting alone, wrapped in my thoughts, how many seasons I've seen go by, following each other into oblivion? How many moons I've watched wax and wane, and the pageant of the stars moving along inexorably and majestically! How many yesterdays of my youth lie buried here, and sometimes I see the ghosts of those dead yesterdays rise up, bringing poignant memories and whispering to me: "Was it worthwhile?
Indeed, I couldn't vary them, for they were stronger than myself, and a force beyond my control drove me to them. Aug 17, Revanth Ukkalam rated it really liked it Shelves: biography , india-s-freedom-movement. Among the various things that Nehru receives praise for, the preeminent must be his honesty and integrity. In his speeches, letters, interviews, and this autobiography, he reserves little for his heart. His passions, infatuations, aversions, fears and anxieties, disappointments, and vulnerabilities - everything, there is almost nothing that he does not meditate on.
The book is far more realistic than most other auto-biographies, like Gandhi's for instance. There are no epiphanies in the book; th Among the various things that Nehru receives praise for, the preeminent must be his honesty and integrity. There are no epiphanies in the book; there is a journey in it of a man who never stopped learning. Nehru offers plenty of feed to be both branded "Pseudo-secular" and 'islamophobic', a 'sycophant' as well as a 'traitor', an elitist as well as a slight stray.
Added to all its glamour is its pronounced cuteness. The book is very very cute. Since these thought were written during one of Pandit Nehru's long and many gaol terms, they carry a distinct meloncholy introspective tone.
The book does not necessarily encourage as the gaol barriers make it difficult for a reader to intimately connect with the writer.
And yet, somewhat amazingly, the reader can not help but appreciate Pandit Nehru for his 3 stars for the book, 5 stars for the man Though titled 'autobiography', it would be more apt to call it 'thoughts on contemporary events'. And yet, somewhat amazingly, the reader can not help but appreciate Pandit Nehru for his honesty, frankness and intellect.
The lasting impression is of a lonely man surrounded by teeming millions, destined to carry the burden of their billion hopes.
An autobiography by Jawaharlal Nehru is not only the tale of the first prime minister of independent India, but also the thoughts of a man who was a diehard democrat, Patriot, cosmopolitan and one of the leading personalities of the twentieth century.
And before we start exploring about the protagonist of this article one thing which I wanna clear for the readers or non readers alike that this book is quite heavy to read.
I would suggest for a layman to go for some good biographies written on Ne An autobiography by Jawaharlal Nehru is not only the tale of the first prime minister of independent India, but also the thoughts of a man who was a diehard democrat, Patriot, cosmopolitan and one of the leading personalities of the twentieth century.
I would suggest for a layman to go for some good biographies written on Nehru and afterwards you can read his autobiography. Nov 28, Mahesh K Adewar rated it liked it. Not that insightful, as I had expected!! Flow of the book is not that great. It's sometimes check your patience and even if you skip some paragraph you won't loose anything.
It goes into too much details in the events of 's. Though bulky and a bit boaring this gives a good tilt of mind of the first Prime Minister of India who Not that insightful, as I had expected!! Though bulky and a bit boaring this gives a good tilt of mind of the first Prime Minister of India who have contributed immensely in nation building.
Must read but having " But" In mind. After reading more than pages, I know less about Nehru than I knew before reading this. Somehow this read more like a collection of essays on contemporary India and Indian freedom movement rather than an autobiographical account. Not unexpected though, since he was intricately interlinked with both.
But the essential personal touch of autobiographies was missing. Gave 3 stars for its difficult prose in Bengali translation. I am not sure who is really responsible for this- Nehru or the translator, but it's not much accessible to today's youth. Its publisher, Ananda Publishers Private Limited, has to retell it with help of a good translator. Aug 16, Nishi A rated it it was amazing. A must read. I started this book with a preconceived notion that the subject discussed would be entirely personal and a lot of it would be dry.
Fifty pages into it gave me an immense curiosity to read more of it. Mr Nehru, the man who spent 9 years i. Nehru, in his autobiography, gives us a solid understanding of who he was, his origins and his boundless love for his nation and his never look back attitude during the freedom movement. From attaining his education in Harrow and Oxford, coming back to India, carrying forward his father's legacy by actively involving in politics, acting as a lieutenant for his commander-in-chief Mr.
Gandhi, he had impeccable record of public and national service. A major part of this book was written in prison and one noteworthy observation from this book was; even though Nehru had huge respect for Gandhi, he disagreed with Gandhi on many occasions, making them intellectual rivals.
There were times when he strongly made his disagreement towards some of the opinions of Gandhi and it shows us how the two extreme characters mingled well astoundingly for a common cause. Even though, Nehru was a member of theosophical society under Annie Besant, a specific chapter from this book called "What is religion?
As much as Nehru hated the communists, he despised the communalists equally and he makes this point on many occasions disassociating himself from any topic of religion and godly affairs. As much as he avoided talking religion with Jinnah, he maintained the same attitude with Gandhi too.
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