1-India Family Mart CEO loves reading TS Eliot, feels his poems are complex, disruptive

The retail chain boss finds TS Eliot's works to be the most appealing.

Agencies
Shukla's favourite poem is 'The Love Song of J Alfred Prufrock' which he calls a master piece.
JP Shukla, CEO and Co-Founder of 1-India Family Mart finds poetry reading as a great destressing way. The retail chain boss finds TS Eliot's works to be the most appealing.

He told ET Panache, "TS Eliot's poetry has amazing complexity and with each reading one can discover new meaning. His poetry is disruptive as it breaks conventions and therefore is highly engaging. The poems emerge as a collage of numerous historical and literary references on a single canvas, and the imagery plays on the mind transporting one to a different world.

Shukla's favourite poem is 'The Love Song of J Alfred Prufrock' which he calls a master piece. He reads poems three to four times in a week. Amidst this pandemic it is these poems that have helped him a lot keep his mind healthy and care-free.


"Reading poetry or even good literature marks a departure from the daily world and at the same time helps one to connect to the various worldly matters in different ways. It is something that an intense movie does to many – evokes catharsis, but with a lot more rhythm. The whole experience is de-stressing and at the same time inspiring. The efforts needed to read poetry, to understand it, and to uncover the layers of meaning end up one a lot richer," he said.

Predictive Text: 'Frankenstein', '1984' And Other Books That Foretold The Future
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A look back at the different times when authors unleashed the Nostradamus in them and came up with something that was years ahead of its time.

A look back at the different times when authors unleashed the Nostradamus in them and came up with something that was years ahead of its time.

Vision: Virus outbreak

In 1981, Dean Koontz wrote a novel titled 'The Eyes of Darkness'. In the book, Koontz mentions a fictional biological weapon Wuhan-400, nearly 40 years before the coronavirus outbreak occurred.

'The Eyes of Darkness' is a story about a mother who discovers her son Danny is being kept in a military facility after being infected with a man-made microorganism called ‘Wuhan-400’. While Twitter went into a little bit of tizzy, that’s where the similarity ends. Unlike the book’s virus, which has a 100 per cent fatality rate, the real world covid-40 has a fatality rate that ranges between two per cent and 14 per cent, depending on several factors.

(Image: Amazon)

Vision: Virus outbreakIn 1981, Dean Koontz wrote a novel titled 'The Eyes of Darkness'. In the book, Koontz mentions a fictional biological weapon Wuhan-400, nearly 40 years before the coronavirus ou..
Read More

Vision: Electric submarines

Jules Verne is considered one of the most forward thinking authors of the 19th century and has predicted numerous things in his most famous book, Twenty Thousand Leagues Under The Sea, which was published in 1870. Verne not only predicted electric submarines 90 years before they were invented, he also imagined them just as they turned out — long and cylindrical. Verne’s submarine called Nautilus also included a main cabin, navigational devices, a dining room, and barometer.

(Image: barnesandnoble.com)

Vision: Electric submarinesJules Verne is considered one of the most forward thinking authors of the 19th century and has predicted numerous things in his most famous book, Twenty Thousand Leagues Un..
Read More

Vision: Mass surveillance

Orwell’s book focuses on topics we are all too familiar with today: Censorship, propaganda, surveillance, and oppressive governments. It was written nearly 70 years ago. In the book, Orwell predicted mass surveillance and police helicopters. Much of what the British author imagined has come true, including facial recognition, speech to text conversion, music made by artificial intelligence, and, of course, the concept of ‘Big Brother’ watching your every move.

(Image: Amazon)

Vision: Mass surveillanceOrwell’s book focuses on topics we are all too familiar with today: Censorship, propaganda, surveillance, and oppressive governments. It was written nearly 70 years ago. In t..
Read More

Vision: Mars has two moons

This all-time favourite book follows a man named Gulliver as he stops at different worlds, those occupied by giants, another by little humans, and one of the most interesting, the island of Laputa. Laputa, in the book, is a floating world filled with scientists. Swift writes about how Gulliver and Laputian astronomers noted that Mars has two moons in its orbit. Today we know this claim to be true, that Mars indeed does have two moons. But Swift wrote 'Gulliver’s Travels' in 1726, nearly 150 years before Phobos and Deimos — the two moons of Mars — were discovered in 1877.

Vision: Mars has two moonsThis all-time favourite book follows a man named Gulliver as he stops at different worlds, those occupied by giants, another by little humans, and one of the most interestin..
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Vision: Organ Transplants

Written in 1818, Shelley’s novel is often considered one of the first science-fiction novels. At that time, science was just beginning to explore the concept of bringing dead tissue back to life using electricity. In Mary Shelley’s 'Frankenstein', the doctor is able to keep an organ alive outside of a body to be transplanted into a new body. To say this was ahead of its time is an understatement. It wasn’t until the mid-20th century (1954) that the first organ transplant became a reality.

Vision: Organ TransplantsWritten in 1818, Shelley’s novel is often considered one of the first science-fiction novels. At that time, science was just beginning to explore the concept of bringing dead..
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