It takes the average reader 4 hours and 24 minutes to read Kolkata 25 - The Genesis by Soham Ghoshal
Assuming a reading speed of 250 words per minute. Learn more
"We all are driven either by love or by hatred, enslaved either by fear or by greed. Like we are either empowered with truth or weakened by pain, either enlightened by spirituality or deceived by religion. But what if one loses both? What's left when only nothing is left?"Tale of a city-Kolkata, and its journey along with its citizens, including a few deserted, wounded souls through a tumultuous socio-political transfiguration into the future of new normal. Dark history and unknown future will challenge the present social fabric.PREFACE: Kolkata, previously known as Calcutta, situated along the bank of the Ganges, is the capital of West Bengal, an Indian state located in the eastern region of the country. The holy river Ganga flows through the state by the name of river Hooghly and merges into the Bay of Bengal. The state is crowned with Darjeeling, a beautiful hill station along the Himalayan foothills, in the north while the Bay of Bengal worships its feet in the south. But this isn't a geography book. Calcutta was once the capital of undivided Bengal and the capital of British India for a long time in pre-independent India. Grand architectural marvels of the British era, including iconic Howrah Bridge, reflect the importance the city gained. A land of goddess worshipers where Goddess Durga, Kali, and Saraswathi are celebrated with most grand festivities. Calcutta, also known as 'The City of Joy, ' has a unique charm of giving a warm feeling of familiarity even to a first-time visitor, as if it has an aura of a charmer. But this is neither a history book nor a travel guide.Every city has characteristics in its veins, which is much deeper than the outer skin of what it's famous for. Its ethnic wear, cuisine, or even language may only end up creating a stereotypical image of the city. Characteristics are like genes of that city.Calcutta, a city that was either the birthplace or the place of endeavors of five Nobel laureates, was the motherland of greats like Swami Vivekananda, Rabindranath Tagore, Satyajit Ray, Subhas Chandra Bose and many more. A city where both national song & national anthem of its nation were written. Social evils like Sati Daha, child marriage, and the ban on widow remarriage were fought on this very land. Art & culture, freedom fight, spirituality, science & academics, social reforms- you name a field and this land have contributed immensely in that field not only to the nation but also to the world- giving birth to Bengal Renaissance. But neither I am writing non-fiction with facts & figures of this city's glorious past, nor am I writing a love letter to this city by taking an easy nostalgic trip back to its golden days.What does a city like Calcutta have in its genes? Progressiveness, liberalism, not brainless guts but the strength to acknowledge and face the truth, a love for education, wisdom, freedom in all aspects and expressing that love through literature & art, above all a fundamental yet rare & valuable human attribute: logical thinking & reasoning ability that enables an individual, a society or the whole mankind to do a necessary yet feared action, which is the backbone of a civilized human society: questioning. Questioning social cultures and its age-old norms, challenging the power, asking deep-rooted bigotry, questioning own self. Questioning, even if it faces protests from the very people or the whole society for which it's being raised.It's said that history repeats itself. Can the gene, the core fabric, of the city be challenged by that reincarnation of dark past camouflaged in new age's glittering outfits? Can it survive through or will be reconstructed into a new one? Can't this Kolkata be any other city? Can we question? Environment & surroundings can overpower what a person inherits to make a person he ends up being. And a city is nothing but a piece of land without its dwellers; us.So, what's this book about? It's about a city's journey towards that 'Nothing.'
Kolkata 25 - The Genesis by Soham Ghoshal is 262 pages long, and a total of 66,024 words.
This makes it 88% the length of the average book. It also has 81% more words than the average book.
The average oral reading speed is 183 words per minute. This means it takes 6 hours to read Kolkata 25 - The Genesis aloud.
Kolkata 25 - The Genesis is suitable for students ages 12 and up.
Note that there may be other factors that effect this rating besides length that are not factored in on this page. This may include things like complex language or sensitive topics not suitable for students of certain ages.
When deciding what to show young students always use your best judgement and consult a professional.
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