33,99 €
inkl. MwSt.
Versandkostenfrei*
Versandfertig in 1-2 Wochen
payback
17 °P sammeln
  • Broschiertes Buch

No one likes C in one's academic transcripts even for a single instance. So consecutive Cs can really be stumbling and shattering for one's academic trajectory. However, contrast to campus test performances, in practical world settings and in fact in most cases persons with Cs excel over than persons with As in terms of real tasks and deliverances. So people with wisdom often raise caution against such segregation of letter grade to project future of immensely hidden potentials or overhyped expectations. Themed in that this thin book is intended to revive English readership in Bangladesh…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
No one likes C in one's academic transcripts even for a single instance. So consecutive Cs can really be stumbling and shattering for one's academic trajectory. However, contrast to campus test performances, in practical world settings and in fact in most cases persons with Cs excel over than persons with As in terms of real tasks and deliverances. So people with wisdom often raise caution against such segregation of letter grade to project future of immensely hidden potentials or overhyped expectations. Themed in that this thin book is intended to revive English readership in Bangladesh through some personal memoirs/satire. Bangladesh, a poor country plagued with natural disaster and a big population without much historical perception for British colonial heritages. Inefficient national politics and policies, over usage of local languages/dialects in cultural growth have resulted in blind alleys for degenerated academia, art, culture, and literature. Based on thirteen FaceBook postings during the Corona world pandemic, the memoirs/satire can serve as a person's flashback of that society after living in a cosmopolitan cultural melting point and multi-cultural environment of New York City. It is expected that the book will appeal to local readers in subcontinents and also to second-generation English-speaking population of Bangladesh origins, in places like New York, London, Sydney, Toronto, Boston, Los Angels, Chicago, Houston, Dallas, Atlanta and other places aside from interested mainstream readers.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Autorenporträt
Rejwan Ali lives in New York City with his wife Sayma and daughter Rinik in Oakland Gardens at the border of Queens borough and Nassau county of Long Island. Born in Rajshahi, a city in the northwestern part of Bangladesh where Padma (Ganges) flows, Rejwan grew up in a highly politically polarized society in post-liberation Bangladesh. Witnessing periods of military rules with intermittent chaotic democracy and autocracy, Rejwan spent all his years in Rajshahi before moving to the USA in the spring of 2001. After living in Kansas, Texas, and North Carolina, Rejwan moved to New York City in the fall of 2008. An educator and scientist by profession, Rejwan takes creative writing as a hobby. Although previously he contributed to Op- Ed column of campus newspaper or in blogs of scientific organization, Corona Crisis Chronicles-Three Cs in a Row is his first book that he would like to dedicate to current and future young generations of Bangladeshis living across the globe and developing literature, arts and also to those in culturally diversified groups who have taken English as their medium of communication to reach common people. Rejwan feels that promotion of the English language readership in Southeast Asia can promote better understanding among countries and nations and will open up more opportunities for common people. In the future, Rejwan hopes to continue devoting his time to write for people besides writing scientific articles for his profession in research and teaching based career.