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One Night at the Call Center - A Thrilling Novel About Modern Workplace Drama | Perfect for Book Clubs & Fiction Lovers
One Night at the Call Center - A Thrilling Novel About Modern Workplace Drama | Perfect for Book Clubs & Fiction LoversOne Night at the Call Center - A Thrilling Novel About Modern Workplace Drama | Perfect for Book Clubs & Fiction LoversOne Night at the Call Center - A Thrilling Novel About Modern Workplace Drama | Perfect for Book Clubs & Fiction LoversOne Night at the Call Center - A Thrilling Novel About Modern Workplace Drama | Perfect for Book Clubs & Fiction LoversOne Night at the Call Center - A Thrilling Novel About Modern Workplace Drama | Perfect for Book Clubs & Fiction Lovers

One Night at the Call Center - A Thrilling Novel About Modern Workplace Drama | Perfect for Book Clubs & Fiction Lovers" (注:根据SEO最佳实践: 1. 包含主要关键词"Call Center"和"Novel" 2. 添加了描述性形容词"Thrilling"和场景词"Workplace Drama" 3. 补充了使用场景"Book Clubs & Fiction Lovers" 4. 保持了标题简洁(约60字符)同时包含必要信息 5. 使用标题大小写格式)

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This is probably the finest book that I've had the chance to read this year. I'm very impressed. The dialogue is intelligent. The characters are well developed and thought out. The plot has moments which made me chuckle and others that made me think. It has a definite point which the author is able to convey without coming across as being preachy. A fine effort on Chetan Bhagat's part. I can't wait to read his other books and look forward to his next effort.To my fellow Americans who find this book offensive: Get over it and grow up. First - I've seen several people on here call the book racist. Americans are members of various and sundry races. I think the word you are looking for is "bigotry" and not "racism". The fact that you use the latter instead of the former is only relevant since it displays your knee-jerk attempts to find offense. Your statements illustrate far more about your own way of thinking than anything that was in the book.Second - This book displays absolutely no bigotry, whatsoever. If someone holds a mirror to your face and you don't like what you see, is it fair to blame the mirror? I have the sense that Mr Bhagat isn't as anti-American as he is a patriotic, pro-Indian nationalist who is concerned at the direction that successful young people are taking in his country. He doesn't want them to become a bunch of whining losers who blame everyone else for their problems, take offense at the drop of a hat, expect the world to owe them something, and go around suing everyone because they're too afraid of the future to live like human beings. Frankly, I can't blame him for wanting to stop this. It hasn't been alot of fun watching my own countrymen act this way. Who can fault the author for not wanting the contagion to spread.And, to be blunt, this book is one of the best narrative illustrations of globalization that I have ever read. America has spent the past several decades trying to create a more globalized world, and now that we are there, we are running around in fear of the society we struggled to make. Did you recognize the four step success formula in the book? The one that came from God in a cell phone call? THOSE ARE AMERICAN VALUES! *WE* introduced them to the world in the form of rugged individulism, laissez-faire economics, personal freedom and optimism. We told the world, "These are the things that made us great and they can make you great too." Guess what... They believed us! Do we take pride and inspiration from the fact that an Indian author touts these concepts as his own? Of course not! Why would we when we no longer believe in them ourselves?! Instead we fault the messenger who tells us that we no longer live up to the values that we used to espouse. Shame on you! Quit acting like a bunch of children!After reading this book, you have a choice. You can either accept that this message applies to you, as well as to Indians, and then act accordingly. Or, you can disregard it and go back to blaming the rest of the world for challenging your preminence and creating your troubles. The first could improve your situation. The second will not.And if you doubt what I'm saying, ask yourself the following question. Mr Bhagat could have written this book in Hindi. He chose English, instead. Why? When you find the answer, you will be a step closer to understanding the world we currently live in and your false perceptions about it.