HAVE YOUR NOSE IN A BOOK

Our guests ask us often to recommend some good books on Bhutan. So, we’ve picked out five books we’ve reviewed over the past few months and explain why they’re great reads as opposed to some average run-of-the-mill kind of books that flood the shelves of bookstores in the market

Treasures of the Thunder Dragon: A Portrait of Bhutan

By Ashi Dorji Wangmo Wangchuck

Queen Mother Ashi Dorji Wangmo Wangchuck’s portrait of Bhutan is a combination of personal memoir, history, folklore and travelogue. It provides unique and intimate insights into Bhutanese culture and society, with its vivid glimpses of life in Bhutan’s villages and hamlets, monasteries and palaces. Her engaging account of her childhood, growing up in a village in western Bhutan and the changes she witnessed when the country decided to end its isolation also tells a larger story—that of Bhutan’s rapid transition from a medieval kingdom to a modern democratic nation within the space of a decade.

This book, with its specially commissioned illustrations by young Bhutanese artists, and photographs from the author’s family album, is essential reading both for those who plan to visit the Kingdom of Bhutan and for armchair travelers who yearn to experience the magic of Bhutan through their imagination.

Bhutanese Tales of the Yeti

By Kunzang Choden

Kunzang Choden needs no introduction as she is the first writer/novelist of Bhutan. Since she began her writing career, she has brought out a number of books – all brilliant and all wonderfully written. But, Bhutanese Tales of the Yeti is dear to every Bhutanese because the writer in her collection of twenty-two stories attempts to document a vital tradition before it is wiped out entirely.

Bhutanese Tales of the Yeti is a good, easy read if you like to indulge in some Bhutanese folklore. All the stories have origins in Bhutan and apart from the stories about yetis, Kunzang Choden lets you in on the people, their customs and traditions, and their way of life.

History of Bhutan

By Dr. Karma Phuntsho

As a historian, Karma Phuntsho’s book is detailed, well written and thoroughly researched. It cuts through the mystery and enchantment of the ‘Last Shangri-la’ and talks about how a people struggling for centuries against invasion, religious wars, oppressive taxes, slavery and ruthless strongmen, emerged in the late 20th Century as an island of good governance with unparalleled environmental ethics while surrounded on all sides by nations swamped in corruption, dysfunction and environmental disaster.

This book is a must read for anybody willing to expand and deepen their knowledge about Bhutan and its history.

Within the Realm of Happiness

By Kinley Dorji

Written by one of Bhutan’s first journalists, Within the Realm of Happiness offers readers a glance into Bhutan – the birthplace of Gross National Happiness. Having obtained his degree from Australia and his Master’s in Journalism from the prestigious Columbia School of Journalism in the U.S., Dasho Kinley Dorji has made a name for himself as one of Bhutan’s favorite writers.

His book – Within the Realm of Happiness – is a collection of 13 stories that are a captivating blend of memoirs and essays that represent a mix of childhood memories, travel tales, and contemporary reflections on a rapidly changing populace. As Bhutan joins the modern world, Kinley Dorji provides sensitive insights into the dilemmas that the people and society confront every day.

Beyond the Silk Route – Travels of a Bhutanese Prince

By Afroze Bukht

Beyond the Silk Route – Travels of a Bhutanese Prince, transports the reader in quick succession, sometimes into the ancient days of Alexander the Great and Constantinople, and sometimes, into the medieval era of Genghis Khan and his Golden Hordes. Afroze Bukht, the author, has managed to provide the reader with a curious mixture of frivolous banality and historic events that are interwoven together in a fabric revealing the mandala of life of His Royal Highness Prince Namgyal Wangchuck.

The long and arduous journey undertaken by His Royal Highness through different continents by rail and road over 30,000 kilometers with historical backdrops, anecdotes and encounters has been brilliantly captured by the author with erudition and humor. What makes this travel book a great collectible is the narration that is spiced with His Royal Highness’ charm and grace which never fails to win the hearts and minds of all those who come in contact with him.

Beyond the Silk Route is an account of one of His Royal Highness’ many travels abroad, where the affable Prince is seen as a keen and observant traveler, seeing way beyond the eyes of a casual tourist. The book is an enjoyable read in that it takes the reader on an overland journey in which the landscape keeps changing with every step. And, with every change, one begins to see the world in a different light, never once leaving the delightful company of His Royal Highness Prince Namgyal Wangchuck.