Showing posts with label Amar Chitra Katha. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Amar Chitra Katha. Show all posts

June 17, 2014

The Story of the Mouse-Merchant - and Lessons for Telangana and Seemandhra/Andhra Pradesh


I am sure you all read the famous tale of the mouse merchant from Amar Chitra Katha series. In case you like me to retell, here goes:

Seeing a dead mouse on the floor, a merchant Vishakila says angrily to his son: "See that dead mouse? A clever man would be able to use even that as a means to increase his wealth. I gave a stupid fellow like you so many dinars, and far from multiplying that money, you have not even been able to keep what you had!". 

An enterprising onlooker asks Vishakila: "Sir, Can I take this dead mouse from you as the capital investment for my business?"

"Of course!"

Vishakila gives the onlooker, Gunadhya, the mouse, wrote him a receipt for it and left. 

Gunadhya sold the mouse as cat food to another merchant for two handfuls of gram. He ground up the gram and took a pot of water and sat under a shady tree at the crossroads outside the city. He offered the gram and the water humbly to a group of tired wood-carriers. Each of them gave him two pieces of wood. Gunadhya then took the wood to the market and sold it. He used part of the money form the sale to buy some more gram, and in the same way, the next day. He got some more wood from the carriers. He did this every day, and soon had enough capital to buy all of the wood-carriers' wood for three days. Suddenly, there was a great shortage of wood for a lot of money. He opened a shop with that money and became a merchant. He soon became a rich man through his own ability and business acumen. 

A few years later, Gunadhya ordered a mouse of gold to be made and returned it to Vishakila who gave his daughter in marriage. He became famous as the Mouse-Merchant because of this story. He became a rich man without having had no money at all.
                                                                                                           
Moral of the story? If you are enterprising and resourceful, you will convert a dead mouse into a golden mouse. If you are not and instead mess around, you can convert a golden mouse into a dead mouse. Wake up and smell the coffee!


#Telangana #AndhraPradesh #Seemandhra #KCR #Naidu #Entrepreneurship

February 19, 2012

Anant Pai - Founder Editor of Amar Chitra Katha now has a comic



Finally, India's favorite comic creator has a comic in his memory posthumously! Uncle Pai's Amar Chitra Katha Amar Rahe. He must be busy in heaven making storyboards out of Angels!



January 13, 2012

Amar Chitra Katha - Alive and Kicking!

Do you know about Amar Chitra Katha? Those two-dimensional multi-color comics brought out by IBH and Uncle Pai? If you were born in the 70s or 80s, you wouldn't have missed reading ACK comics or its offfspring - Tinke Comics. My boyhood dreamsof "owning" all the ACK comics ever published was realised a few years back only. Thats about 240 comics in all out of 800 comics due to a fire mishap which destroyed the artworks of the original comics. Finally, those who followed the phenomenon of ACK would recall IBH sold off the perpetual rights of the comics to a Pune-based company called Geodesic for some Rs.22 crores. That is still a low price for a priceless heritage. Now, for all those who outgrew those comics, it might please you to note that ACK P Ltd - the new publishing house for these comics is trying to restore some of the comics lost in the fire and also bringing out titles every month over the last two years. So far, they have brought out 60 odd titles anew last few years which takes the complete list of ACK comics to 300 or 315 - though the volume no. is additive and counting above 800. So, the latest volume is no.831 and is on TENZING NORGAY - the man who climbed Mt.Everest. Amongst the new titles they brought out this year - "Lord of Seven Hills", "Ganesha and the Moon", "Tales of Indra", "Vaishno Devi Temple", "Chittagong Revolution" etc. are all racy reads and still evoke that nostalgia of the old comics. I have many friends who want to acquire the collection of these books again for themselves and for their wards. I have been acquiring some of these comics with an eye to resell for profit (they are as pricey as Art works of stature) or imbue them to a library of my choice over the past few years. I must say, I now have most of the 831 comics ever printed - maybe a hundred less - but I know I will get them all sooner. What sets the new titles beginning No.780 or so from the old titles is the different approach to comic design - it combines the new techniques of graphic novels with age-old narrative style fitting into 30 pages. Hopefully, it should appeal to the Harry Potter/Tolkien-reading generation next. Which means, you will be through in 15 minutes - faster than what it takes to swallow Nachos in multiplexes. At Rs.50/- per issue, I always bet that owning an Amar Chitra Katha title beats the bat out of inflation fears - I used to buy it at Rs.1.00 or Rs.1.50 per issue. Since 1977 or so, it has gone up 50 times, higher than the CII factor of inflation used for tax calculations. I have firm belief that Amar Chitra Katha comics will live on like any other nation's story-telling comics for several thousands of millieu in India. We don't have a Smithsonian Museum equivalent in India - but ACK comics fit the bill nearly well in that slot. Ananth Pai - the creator of those comics also passed away this year - but his legacy will live on. My family and a group of friends close to my heart share legions of experiences with Ananth Pai and his wife - I will share them separately some other time. Long live Amar Chitra Katha!


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