Il Cavaliere Pazzo has been open for over two years and whether you're there for drinks after work, for a meal or taking in a polo match, it's the ideal all-round place. Themed around polo; the napkin holders are horseshoes- adds a nice touch, and both floors of the restaurant open up to the Accra Polo grounds.
Friday, April 29, 2011
Wednesday, April 27, 2011
Conversations in Ghana: Renée Q - Entrepreneur
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
On being well read
I came across this post on one of my favourite
blogs and it roused something in me about, what truly makes one well read. I
have always grappled with this even more so because in my formative years, high
school and all though my undergraduate years I was exposed more to the
Classics; from Shakespeare, Brontë and Austen, to the Huxleys, Wells' and
Orwells of the literary world.
My foray into African literature however came late in life - call it the result of a purely British school curricula and
a lack of awareness of the literary treasures just beyond the borders of my
country, but it was only in graduate school where my eyes were opened to a
whole new world.
To many, with respect to what can
be defined strictly within the confines of African literature - I am not well
read, but I can hold my own when it is Western classics under discussion.
These days I favour the new
writers; Jhumpa Lahiri, Zadie Smith and Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie - not to say I
still will not revert to Yeats or Keats or Whitman, or pick up Toni Morrisson,
or James Baldwin when the mood strikes. I am still partial to Faulkner, Dahl,
and have even dabbled in Kafka. My infatuation with Rohinton Mistry has been
replaced with Khaled Hosseini and I still think Salman Rushdie weaves a good
tale. Nadine Gordimer, J.M. Coetzee and lately Marlene van Niekerk
inspire. As my reading list will confirm - these days it is everything I can get my hands
on. Prolific reader? Absolutely. Well read? I don’t know really. Am I?
So what does make one well
read?
Monday, April 25, 2011
Gastronomy in Ghana: The Lounge
Sushi at The Lounge . I wrote about Chase last month, but only tried out The Lounge recently. I went for sushi with a friend, and we were treated to firm, fresh maki rolls, nigiri and a delightful salmon salad.
Saturday, April 23, 2011
Gastronomy in Ghana: Zion Thai Restaurant
Thursday, April 21, 2011
Thousand hand Buddha...brilliant!
Moving, synchronized dances, and all the more powerful when you consider the timing that has to go into the movements given that the dancers do not hear the music - although they were being cued through sign language. The 'Thousand hand Bodhissatva' dance was absolutely amazing and the 'Butterfly lover' dance equally captivating. Then there was the Jazz performance, the Latin dancing... I could go on forever. It was a truly fantastic show!
Wednesday, April 20, 2011
Gastronomy in Ghana: Safari French Restaurant
Monday, April 18, 2011
Conversations in Ghana: Constance Swaniker - Sculptor, CEO & Founder of Accents & Art
I fell in love this weekend. I fell in love with art of a different kind. I was equally charmed by confidence, passion and an understated manner that made me sit back and smile. Constance Swaniker, CEO and Founder of Accents & Art is all of that. Calm - very calm, quietly confident and unassuming given that she is behind a company that is slowly making its presence felt, and I say slowly because Accents & Art has been around for over 11 years. It is a winner of accolades, which in her very modest way was not all that eager to discuss; this from someone who is the recent recipient of an award bestowed on her by the Ghana Chamber of Commerce for the Best Entrepreneur - SME Innovation Award.
"We got that last night", she casually mentions.
Thursday, April 14, 2011
Books: THE CENTRE CANNOT HOLD by Elyn R. Saks
Title: The Centre Cannot Hold - A
memoir of my schizophrenia
Author: Elyn R. Saks
Published: 2007
Genre: Memoir
I enjoyed this book tremendously
and was also completely horrified by some aspects of it. Why horrified? The
thought that one can go through the experiences that she went through; the
misdiagnosis of her illness, the forced admission into mental hospitals and
subsequent forced drug treatment - and all due to the fragile definition of
what is defined as mentally stable. Mild depression or complete
psychosis can, if there is no one there to speak up for you, earn you the type
of treatment reserved solely for mentally 'unstable' people. Every time I
gather with family and friends around a dinner table, I always insist that we
all have a gratitude moment...the one constant for me is always 'I am grateful
for my sanity'. I always either manage to elicit chuckles or curiously-raised
eyebrows. And such is the reaction that mental health issues elicit wherever
you are in the world. Elyn Saks takes the reader through a process of
explaining what 'losing one's mind' truly means.
Thursday, April 7, 2011
Books: THE SHAPE OF WATER by Andrea Camilleri
Title: The shape of water
Author: Andrea Camilleri
Published: 1994 (English Translation: 2002)
Genre: Fiction
The shape of water is one in a
series of Camilleri's Inspector Montalbano Mystery books. This was a
book club read that I would not have ordinarily chosen. It's a quick, simple
read that is humorous throughout - some parts of which I attribute to a loss in
translation of initial intended meanings. I also found some parts of the writing
somewhat stilted. I most definitely did not enjoy any of the jokes, which I
found quite juvenile, even in what is the realm of detective stories - which in
their own right are meant to be entertaining.
Wednesday, April 6, 2011
Gastronomy in Ghana: Bella Roma
Saturday, April 2, 2011
Gastronomy in Ghana: Magnolia's Restaurant & Bar
We went for waffles but decided on pancakes and chips and chicken wings - with milk shakes for the kids. Simple, well presented and tasty. Still love their toasted baguette with garlic butter that they bring out while you wait.
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