What We All Need: Anti Terrorist Incompletions

By Staff

Except that if, in the course of my not-long life, I have learned anything, it is that what seems Paradise often isn't.

What We All Need By Richard Crasta

Richard Crasta is an Indian English writer, who is noted for his brave ideas and open writing. Very rarely, his books unlit any spark of controversy after their publication. What We All Need is not an exception in this category. Presently banned at some parts of India, let us see what this book has to offer for the readers.

The essays and the fiction in What We All Need link diverse subjects as sex, unsafe sex, Bill Gates, terrorism, chemical slavery, and massage. As the reader goes through pages of the book, it is common to hear loud laughs in the reading room. However, as usual the laughter subsides and the reader takes back to the realm of contemplation at the bold writing.

The essays in What We All Need are distinct and thought provoking in their own way. For instance an essay is written in the form of a letter addressed to Bill Gates. Another essay romps through subjects as diverse as the Pink Berets plan to neutralize Al Qaeda. "A Short History of My Pecker", subversively redefines history, approaches to historical research and the great Bangalore backrub.

With witty, sexy, and passionate style, Richard Crasta deals with India's tortured and confused Puritanism. An essay n Indian massage is an excellent example on India's prodigious but biologically unbalanced literary outpourings. "The Anti-Literary Manifesto", brings out the essence of the title. Here Crasta describes What We All Need as his act of self-liberation from five years of internal oppression and public silence.

The essays and fiction in this book thus overlaps the contemporary life in U.S and India. The book has a major significance in the contemporary world due to the increasing connection between the two countries. The essays in What We All Need deal with the real life situations in so many people's lives. This is a true anti war philosophy applicable in the terror stricken generation.