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Flipping through
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Experience your country in “100 Wonders of India –The finest treasures of civilisation and nature”, says RANA SIDDIQUI
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Cultural Riches The treasures of Nagarjunakonda in Andhra Pradesh
When Albin and Melanie Ulle, a couple from Colorado, read, “1000 Places To See Before You Die” by Patricia Schultz, they took five months off from work to take a round of the place names mentioned. Lucky they were, for they got even a sponsor to finance their journey.
But these places were dotted in all possible ends of the world. For those who have the spirit of this couple and yet can’t think of crossing beyond India, there is an option now. They can find their inspiration in “100 Wonders of India – The finest treasures of civilisation and nature”, a book filled with marvellous pictures and apt descriptions of as many as 100 places and armed with the power to prompt one to take the travel bag out. Recently published by Roli Books, this glossy coffee-table book running into 210 pages, is divided into two sections, man-made and natural wonders. Though many of its ‘wonders’ (like the Taj Mahal, Hawa Mahal, etc.) have a repeat value, but then, as Nirad Grover, its writer, puts it, “They cannot be ignored”. And yet, it has certain places that one has barely heard of. For instance, Bishanpur’s (West Bengal) terracotta temples, the uncared art galleries in Shekhawati (Rajasthan ) that runs around 30,000 square kilometres,etc. It also features the toy train run by Darjeeling Himalayan Railway that climbs 1,750 metres without a single tunnel taking the traveller on a 88 km journey across the eastern Himalayas at an average speed of 10 km per hour.
People’s choice
The book’s natural wonders make more interesting reading as it comes straight from “people’s choice list”, says Nirad. It includes places like Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Namdapha National Park that lie in the tri-junction of India, Myanmar and China and is said to be one of the last forest frontiers of the world, and tribes like Toda in the Nilgiri hills, and so on.
It is interesting to note that if the book at many places is an example of armchair writing, on the other, it also makes history interesting for those who always hated it. Spectacular pictures of monuments, quick, short and crisp notes on them that doesn’t go beyond one page, a road map, accommodation facilities and a few words on some nearby places worth visiting, add to the spice one looks for in such tomes. Says Nirad, “In the course of compiling the book, I met several people from different states and asked their preferences of places they would like to visit. A few of them were those I had never heard of, so I included them in the book. At the same time, it was necessary to include both secular and religious sites and then further divide them according to categories like buildings, museums, palaces, ocean, forests, etc.”
Nirad took six months to complete the book but interestingly, it may take you barely an hour to finishing reading it thanks to its crisp and quick text.
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