000 02520nam a22001697a 4500
999 _c4571
_d4571
008 180412b xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a978-81-8455-283-6
082 _223
_a821.92
_bSIN
100 _aSingh Balbir
245 _aThe Ignoble Strife /
_cDr.Balbir Singh.
250 _a1st edu.
_b2011.
260 _aNew Delhi.
_bOmega publications.
_c2011.
300 _a120 p . ;
_bhardbound
_c14x22cm
505 _a1.The variety of humanity 2.The terrible phase of history 3.Human brotherhood 4.Envy 5.Raw society 6.Taking on evil 7.The prisoners 8.The annals of humans 9.Solutions 10.The overlaping generations 11.Unity of diversity 12.Old things 13.All escapes are temporary 14.No one cares 15.Out of control 16.Till death separate us 17.Pity 18.Privacy 19.Her Survival 20.Searching for a pattern 21.Love 22.Fighting 23.Lilliputains 24.The branch of white roses 25.The central pillars 26.If i knew 27.The Connecting link 28.A happy day 29.The glass wall 30.The moon above the hills 31.A Palace among the hills 32.The party began 33.Peace 34.The people and I 35.Moral edifice 36.The simplest path 37.Ecstasy in the hut 38.The rich and the poor 39.The young old man 40.To be rich 41.What else is life 42.The company of humans 43.Dead past 44.Unpleasant situation 45.What next? 46.Decline 47.Forward movement 48.Work and life 49.Icarus 50.Man's destiny 51.Our life 52.What to do 53.Marooned 54.Who should sacrifice 55.People 56.Reining in the beast in me 57.Dilemma 58.The dancers 59.The dog who lost his way 60.The gypies 61.Growth in society 62.Light and darkness 63.The beginning of day 64.Mr.Birju?he killed himself 65.The flowing stream 66.As good as dead 67.Prayers and pains 68.I couldn't phone a friend 69.The control freak 70.The crying infant
520 _aIn his fourth book of poems Dr. Balbir Singh explores the predicament of the contemporary individual with a rare vigor and penetration. In these poems he delineates a cultural and moral landscape which appears to be replete with confusion and complacency. The streak of pessimism is, in fact, a corollary of his acute observation of his milieu. However, the reality of his vision more than compensates the feelings of gloom and despondency which find expression in some of the poems. His range is not limited to the immediate human condition and, as in his earlier poems, he rakes up the universal themes and issues, albeit in the context of the postmodern era.
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_cBK