Do you speak Finnish?
Written by Raman Shresta   
Thursday, 31 December 2009
Image
 
Well, what do you know?
Your favourite book-shop has got a mention
in a website in Finland!
(click on the image above to follow the link)
 
We understand that
Anna Pesonen
writer, photographer, film scholar
and a dear friend
is responsible for this wonderful New Year's surprise.
 
Thank You Anna!
 
 
 
 .

 Our other Friend at Rachna, Serah Basnet says Google can translate the article. So here it goes:

 

Sikkim greeted all India, Sikkim, soaring mountain landscape, flourish in a special bookshop. Rachna Books offers some protection against the monsoon rain, deceive the  collector's rarities and accommodate the weary travel time.

In October and March-April is peak time for travel to India, Sikkim and Darjeeling mountains. Middle Town Kolkata bengaliperheet spend their holidays in the mountains enjoy a fresh climate. Foreigners attracted by the landscape. Sikkim is a natural addition to the special magnet: a bookshop, a wide range of varying the supply of call log.

Raschna Books on it is not just a bookstore. Sikkim city center, the place of work exhibition, film club, events, and a living room-type reading mode. Second-floor home in the tourist can stay.

Eurooppalaisvalokuvaajista most recently have been the case in Switzerland Markus Wild Sikkim documentation of everyday life. Rachna Books owner Raman Shrestan the visitors are from France, Spain, Britain, Scandinavia and around the world.

"People are coming from, istahtavat to exchange ideas and continue their journey. In June, the monsoon rains at the start of a good bookstore to give protection for deaf people," Shresta says with a smile.

At least seven to eight times a year for the owner to do themselves out of the Sikkim book shop purchases. Travel most often directed to Kolkata and Delhi, where India's major organized book events.

Shelves can be found in single issues, such as the father of Indian cinema, Dadasaheb Phalken, a biography and Sirish Rao delivered a baby post-erik Irja Baby! (2003), which belongs to Indian popular culture imagery. Shresta less widely remembered image of the work of Chennai in South India.

The work is part of Indian popular culture, a broader set of gods, goddesses, policy people and matchboxes. The same posters were sold in a bookstore in 1979-80, when the place was still Shrestan father owned. A family business had just been set up.

In Finland, Indian poster art has been prominently in the "India Express - Sacred and popular" exhibition in Helsinki's Tennis Palace in 2006. This year, India was the beginning of October teemamaa organized at the Turku International Book Fair.

India fascinates from year to year, particularly for color and diversity. Beneath the surface raises the more serious themes of the country. Indian postcolonial period of poets who have been published in Finland, omnibus, he is not (2003), which translators are Markus Jääskeläinen and Merja Estonian.

Sikkim is a local bookstore and local, but at the same time to maintain business ties with Europe and the rest of the e-mail, websites and exhibitions and through. Today, conditions are very good glokaalisti to acting. The projects, however, requires effort.

Contracts and projects carried out Rachna Books on emotional basis. Place lately, and tell the owner's collection of attractions, such as film and literature. Big chains relatively lower marketing advantage is the fact that several different flavors, capable to account for the purchases.

"The local perspective is important that young people of Sikkim are to grow high-quality literature. When young people develop good books ahmien, the whole of society can be better," says Shresta trade principles.

"The present was just a little girl who wrote poems in Nepali. In the second evening of music by a German woman, played the flute and violin autralialainen."

In addition, consulting gigs and alternative bands in particular, the region known as Bengal, traveling, and your own philosophy on the team, baul music.

"The deal was closed between eight years, until 2001 when it was re-opened. Previously, only one small room has been expanded several rooms full status", Shresta presents.

One of the site visitors are Manish Raj Shresta, which despite its name does not have Raman Shrestan relative. He is the author of the document, which has become a place to exchange news. He also holds a position on Sikkim, Lounge 31a: n. Like so many small places, here, all the people affected know each other - if not otherwise, so at least looks like. Trade, no one is left greeting.

Rachna Books So You Think You Can Photoshop digital imaging competition is ongoing and open to participants from around the world.

Last Updated ( Thursday, 31 December 2009 )