Jumat, 27 Juli 2012

[N132.Ebook] Ebook Bad Karma, by Deborah Blum

Ebook Bad Karma, by Deborah Blum

Downloading and install guide Bad Karma, By Deborah Blum in this web site listings could offer you more advantages. It will certainly reveal you the very best book collections and also completed compilations. Numerous books can be discovered in this internet site. So, this is not just this Bad Karma, By Deborah Blum Nonetheless, this book is referred to check out since it is a motivating book to offer you a lot more possibility to obtain experiences as well as thoughts. This is simple, check out the soft documents of guide Bad Karma, By Deborah Blum and also you get it.

Bad Karma, by Deborah Blum

Bad Karma, by Deborah Blum



Bad Karma, by Deborah Blum

Ebook Bad Karma, by Deborah Blum

Bad Karma, By Deborah Blum. Reading makes you better. That says? Lots of sensible words say that by reading, your life will certainly be much better. Do you think it? Yeah, show it. If you require the book Bad Karma, By Deborah Blum to check out to show the smart words, you could visit this web page completely. This is the site that will certainly supply all guides that possibly you need. Are guide's collections that will make you really feel interested to check out? Among them right here is the Bad Karma, By Deborah Blum that we will certainly propose.

Below, we have countless publication Bad Karma, By Deborah Blum as well as collections to check out. We also offer alternative kinds as well as type of the books to search. The fun book, fiction, history, unique, scientific research, and other types of books are available below. As this Bad Karma, By Deborah Blum, it ends up being one of the favored book Bad Karma, By Deborah Blum collections that we have. This is why you are in the right website to view the remarkable books to have.

It will not take more time to purchase this Bad Karma, By Deborah Blum It will not take even more money to publish this e-book Bad Karma, By Deborah Blum Nowadays, individuals have actually been so wise to make use of the modern technology. Why do not you utilize your device or other device to conserve this downloaded soft file publication Bad Karma, By Deborah Blum By doing this will allow you to always be gone along with by this publication Bad Karma, By Deborah Blum Certainly, it will certainly be the best good friend if you read this e-book Bad Karma, By Deborah Blum up until finished.

Be the first to obtain this book now as well as obtain all factors why you have to read this Bad Karma, By Deborah Blum Guide Bad Karma, By Deborah Blum is not simply for your tasks or necessity in your life. Books will always be a buddy in every time you read. Now, allow the others understand about this page. You can take the advantages and share it likewise for your friends as well as individuals around you. By in this manner, you could actually get the significance of this e-book Bad Karma, By Deborah Blum beneficially. What do you believe concerning our idea right here?

Bad Karma, by Deborah Blum

A TRUE CRIME THRILLER THAT EXPLORES THE DARKEST REGIONS OF ROMANTIC INFATUATION. THE YEAR: 1969 THE SETTING: Berkeley, California THE STORY: Amidst the turmoil of student rebellion two loners encounter each other and turn an innocent flirtation into a dance of death. THE CHARACTERS: Prosenjit Poddar was the brilliant engineering student who wanted nothing more than to return to his native India a big success and to marry a woman of his parents' choosing. Tanya Tarasoff was the naïve coed who just wanted somebody to love. And Larry Moore was the young psychologist who thought he recognized the warning signs that his patient was not just suffering from a jilted love affair... but was about to commit an act of murder. THE STAKES: In a culture clash that pits the traditional values of male-dominated India against free-love attitudes of Berkeley in the '60s, an impending tragedy unfolds. Soon Larry Moore finds himself face-to-face with the biggest dilemma of his career. What does a doctor do if he perceives his patient as mentally unstable and a threat to the well-being of another... but is bound by the oath of doctor-patient confidentiality not to warn the police? This true story tracks Moore’s race against time to stop the inevitable. BAD KARMA is more than an anatomy of madness; it is also a chronicle of the events that would culminate in a landmark decision handed down by the California Supreme Court. Known simply as Tarasoff, this 1976 ruling would change the oath of confidentially between therapist and patient, and establish the rule that a mental health professional has the legal duty to protect a threatened individual.

  • Sales Rank: #2419925 in Books
  • Published on: 2013-06-22
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 9.00" h x .76" w x 6.00" l, .99 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 302 pages

From Publishers Weekly
This affecting true crime book by a California film producer tells the story of two young people in the Berkeley of 1968 whose relationship proved to be a tragedy. They were from vastly different cultures: Prosenjit Poddar, a naval architecture student at the University of California, was from India's Untouchables, and knew nothing about young Americans, their attitudes, their dating rituals. Tanya Tarasoff, a junior college student, knew even less about Indian customs. Additionally, their personality problems were acute: he was a single-minded individual whose obsession with his work turned into an obsession for Tanya, while she, immature, insecure and the product of a home dominated by an alcoholic bully of a father, manipulated her power over Poddar, alternately luring and rejecting him. A psychiatrist who treated him predicted violence, but got no cooperation from the police. Poddar was found guilty of killing the young woman and was eventually deported after his conviction was overturned. Photos not seen by PW. (June 30pTHE LIFE OF A REAL GIRL: An Autobi
Copyright 1986 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal
In 1968, Prosenjit Poddar, 23, made the remarkable transition from Indian untouchable to graduate student at the University of California at Berkeley. Completely ignorant of American dating customs, he met Tanya Tarasoff, 19, a junior college student, at a folk dance. What for Tanya was only a casual, sometimes ego-boosting, sometimes annoying, friendship, became for Prosenjit an all-consuming, mad obsession. Despite psychiatric counseling for Prosenjit, the affair ended when he stabbed Tanya to death at her parents' home. Blum, a Berkeley student herself at the time, captures the essence of people and place in this dramatized, perceptive, and riveting account of an ill-fated relationship doomed by cultural conflicts. Recommended. Gregor A. Pres ton, Univ. of California Lib., Davis
Copyright 1986 Reed Business Information, Inc.

About the Author
Deborah Blum was a sophomore at U.C. Berkeley when the murder of Tanya Tarasoff occurred. After returning to Los Angeles to work as a documentary writer/director and producer of major Hollywood feature films, she became fascinated by the Tarasoff case and began an investigation that was to last seven years and take her twice to India.

Most helpful customer reviews

33 of 34 people found the following review helpful.
Cultural shock at Berkeley, circa 1969
By Dennis Littrell
This is a beautifully written, painstakingly researched and organized, fearless exploration of a tragic clash of character and culture. Deborah Blum strove for objectivity and empathy, understanding and identification, and she achieved it. In so far as a true crime story can be a work of art, this is one.

The setting is Berkeley 1969, Telegraph Avenue and People's Park, etc. recalled with vivid and nostalgic detail. The two central characters, Prosenjit, an Indian exchange student at the university and Tanya, an American student, begin a flirtation that ends in tragedy. She is a sweet, innocent (or nearly innocent) girl who really only deserved to be loved, but she plays head games and heart games with Prosenjit who loves her passionately, and he is deeply hurt. I guess she couldn't know from her limited experience that in such situations some men can be dangerous. He is an Untouchable, or at least his grandfather was, and a nerd, and she lords it over him with her Caucasian beauty so that gradually he becomes obsessed with her. She grows uncomfortable with his obsession and wants him out of her life. But she calls him back after being dumped by another guy. The reader knows, as in a Greek tragedy, that this calling Prosenjit back reveals her fatal flaw.

Blum includes some photos of Tanya and some of Prosenji and his village in India. Her father is a jealous and controlling alcoholic, a Russian by birth who snoops around her room looking for evidence of liaisons and follows her about and forbids her to date although she is in college. She is a bright pretty girl who lacks in confidence. Prosenjit is a genius or nearly so, who has risen from his lowly birth to be one of the most promising of his generation in India. Interesting is his friend Jal Mehta, a Parsi Indian who knows Prosenjit from school in India and believes in his genius and tries to help him. Jal is confident and charming, articulate and wise in the ways of the world, but Prosenjit is jealous of him and cannot accept his help.

At some point Prosenjit begins to threaten violence, but Tanya continues to taunt him. She gets some satisfaction out of his obsessive love for her, but she hates him because he is such a nerd, and she despises his fawning behavior. Nonetheless, she comes to his room a couple of times a week and lords it over him. He secretly tape everything, and when she is gone he listens to the tapes over and over again, looking for some sign that she really loves him. He even splices some words together so that he has her saying "I love you." She rewards him sometimes with a tongue kiss on the mouth. Prosenjit, who is a prudish Victorian Indian, is both thrilled and shocked.

This is an excellent portrait of obsession. The clear compliancy of Tanya is notable. It suggests not just carelessness or an adolescent meanness, but something sadder, perhaps a self-destructive wish. Of course we feel sorry for her. We are led to feel sorry for both of them, just as we felt sorry for Romeo and Juliet.

Incidentally Tanya's parents eventually sued UC Berkeley, the shrinks in particular, for not warning them that their daughter was in danger. They won a landmark case that makes it mandatory for mental health care workers to warn potential victims if they think their client is dangerous.

15 of 16 people found the following review helpful.
True Crime Fans Look No Further...
By jazzgirl
This is a very well written account of obsession that escalates into absolute madness. I found it very difficult to put this book down. Since the other reviewers have done an excellent job of summarizing the story, I won't be redundant.

The author has done a wonderful job of writing a true crime story that reads like a novel.

I highly recommend it!!

19 of 22 people found the following review helpful.
TWO YEARS AFTER THE SUMMER OF LOVE - FATAL ATTRACTION
By BeatleBangs1964
This beautifully written, highly detailed and extraordinarily resarched book probes into the case of a fatal attraction.
Tanya Tarasoff is a bright Russian-American girl attending a local community college in Berkely, California. She hopes to be accepted at Berkeley. Her father, a cruel, domineering problem drinker appears to have some rather paleolithic views of women in general. He verbally and physically mistreats his wife and Tanya's younger brother and sister. He snoops in Tanya's room, roots through her drawers and reads her mail. Tanya spends as little time as she possibly can at home, preferring the company of her fat friend Cindy. Cindy is described as Tanya's opposite number. Noncerebral and not academically inclined, Cindy appears to be more interested in the dating scene and is perfectly content to remain in a community college.
Tanya's aspirations are much greater. She takes a cultural dance class at Berkeley where she meets a student from India named Prosenjit Poddar.
Poddar, an Indian native and grandson of an Untouchable sees California as the Golden Dream. He falls into an obsessive love with Tanya and demands every minute of her free time. Tanya is plainly not interested in Poddar and involves herself in a number of sporadic flings. She falls in love with a boy identified as "Jeff" in a health food store and is crushed by his refusal to see her again after they have sex; she has a relationship with a boy during the last summer of her life and becomes pregnant. Tanya does not appear to have any sexual responsibility and she does not sound like she treated other people very well. One gets the feeling that Tanya likes using Poddar and having the superior position. She appears to like manipulating Poddar by acting like the brass ring; maybe, just maybe he can win her love if he plays his cards right. Of course, this is impossible and Tanya remains out of his reach at all times.
Poddar's obsession takes a dangerous tone when he stalks the girl, making recordings of their conversations and even buying her an Indian sari. He demands that she go out with him and chastises her like a stern parent when she does not show up at the appointed time. His controlling attitude towards her probably reminds her of her father's controlling attitude towards women in general.
Her father extends that controlling philosophy towards his only son. Beaten and browbeaten too many times, Alex leaves home and takes an apartment in the Berkeley area. Poddar learns of this and rooms with Alex. Alex is described as being a lot like the father -- he is cruel, explosive and completely contemptuous of Poddar. He dangles Tanya in front of Poddar's face like a treat. If Poddar will fix his Dodge Charger, he will repay the favor by telling him about Tanya. Tanya does not like Poddar and wants him out of her life.
Other Indian students who room with Poddar in the International House (I-House) insist that he seek counselling. His running obsession with Tanya is frightening and alarming. They successfully get him in therapy where Poddar further reveals his obsession with the Russian-American girl.
He hounds Tanya by telephone, sends her gifts and waits for her at her home. Tanya's repeated entreaties that he leave her alone go unheeded. Fortunately for Tanya, she had an aunt in Brazil who had been encouraging her to visit. Tanya's parents endorsed the idea, so Tanya spent the entire summer of 1969 in Brazil. Poddar deteriorated mentally and mourned the loss of having Tanya.
When Tanya returns to California in early August, Poddar appears to be at least trying to put her out of his mind. His doctors are alarmed at his choosing Tanya's brother as a roommate. One wonders why Poddar disclosed that fact. That was asking for more intervention, which was sorely needed by that point.
Poddar never really is able to release his obsession with Tanya. He resumes following and telephoning her. When she takes her first courses at Berkeley that fall of 1969, Poddar is waiting for her and stalking her. Tanya has made plans to move in with her fat friend, Cindy. She voices her concerns about the stalking to Cindy and at one point tells Poddar she is not interested in him. Refusing to get the message, Poddar's obsession escalates and buys a gun to finish off his unfinished business. He kills Tanya at her home in late October of 1969.
In a landmark lawsuit, Tanya's parents sued Berkeley and Poddar's treating psychiatrists for failing to disclose their real concerns that he was indeed a very dangerous patient.

See all 97 customer reviews...

Bad Karma, by Deborah Blum PDF
Bad Karma, by Deborah Blum EPub
Bad Karma, by Deborah Blum Doc
Bad Karma, by Deborah Blum iBooks
Bad Karma, by Deborah Blum rtf
Bad Karma, by Deborah Blum Mobipocket
Bad Karma, by Deborah Blum Kindle

[N132.Ebook] Ebook Bad Karma, by Deborah Blum Doc

[N132.Ebook] Ebook Bad Karma, by Deborah Blum Doc

[N132.Ebook] Ebook Bad Karma, by Deborah Blum Doc
[N132.Ebook] Ebook Bad Karma, by Deborah Blum Doc

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar