Wednesday, 21 July 2021

"The Purple Violet of Oshaantu" by Neshani Andreas

 "The Purple Violet of Oshaantu"

by Neshani Andreas



Overall Review: 4* 

A narrative describing life in a small village in Africa: A small and sweet book giving a peek into the village of Oshaantu in Namibia.  When you read such books, you get a perspective towards life as a whole.  It is a story of a woman and her neighbor living in the same village but have totally different lives.  The book provides a peek into the patriarchal structure of the village and the total absence of women's rights in these villages.  

The narrator is telling the story of her friend and there is a comparison between hers and her friend's life.  The entire village is full of women with similar challenges and obstacles in life.  Her neighbor and friend is being cheated on, beaten and ignored by her husband.  The society just turns a blind eye towards anything that is done to her and just expect her to live on.  At the time of the death of her husband though people gather like vultures to take away whatever they can.  

An eye opener which tells the plight of women:  A behavior which is more or less common across the world.  A woman takes care of her family and her in laws.  In return her life is so much dependent on how her husband behaves.  If the husband is not with the wife, no one is there.  The same thought is being shared in the book when suggestion is being made so many times for her to leave the husband and move on.  I was angry at how this woman was treated by her husband, the society and his family.  At the end however, she chose her peace.  

Well written with great thought and flow: It is the first book by this author and she has done a good job and describing the lives of the women in the village. It is well written where each big and small event is being described beautifully.  It certainly exposes all things wrong with the society and human mentality.  

Saturday, 10 July 2021

"The Family Lawyer" by James Patterson

 The Family Lawyer

by James Patterson


What will you do if one fine day your kid lands up in jail for allegedly killing someone.  I for one would certainly have a heart attack.  But then that is the time when the kid needs us the most.  That is what the whole one story for the family lawyer is all about.  The father is able to bring his daughter out of the mess she has dragged herself in.  Knowing your family and believing in them is the most important thing specially when trust is broken.  The story includes a twist which came at the time when most needed.  However, steps could have been made to make the other lawyer more productive.  I believe the finishing of the first story was rushed.  

I was disappointed by this book being a collection of three short stories.  I was not looking for that.  Also, the name of the book is the name of the first story.  The other stories are also fine but that is not what was sold to me.  I honestly like the first one only.  The second story for the Night Sniper is also good but then it just goes downhill with the third.  Even in the Night Sniper, I do not understand the significance of making the lady cop as dysfunctional.  I also do not understand why is being high and on drugs all the time glorified by writers.  

I am giving only a 2 star to this book and honestly the writer could have worked better on the first story and shaping it better to make this book a success.  

Monday, 21 June 2021

The Thirteenth Tale by Diane Setterfiled

 The Thirteenth Tale

By Diane Setterfield



Story telling at its best: The need of telling your story and the need to know different stories can consume you.  This is a story of twins - those who stayed alive in flesh and also those who stayed alive in sprit.  This books revolves around two stories - one for a well to do family living in a big house and the other for a biographer living with her parents.  A mystery caught up in the web of family drama and complicated characters.  Angelfield is huge mansion where a family lives, flourishes and lastly withers away.  The girls living there make another life for themselves and that is when they come in contact with the second set of twins.  However, throughout their lives they harbor a deep and dark secret which comes out only at the end and breaks the heart of the reader.  

Amazing writing: The writer has the capability of making you get lost in her words and her characters and her story.  The book can engulf you and you can get lost inside the shop, roads, house, cake, garden etc. mentioned in the book.  It took me some time to get hooked to this book, but once I got into it, I could even dream about the story and the characters.  I love this book and it has stayed with me just like the Night circus.  I would love to come back to it one day.  

Perfect book for book lovers: This is a book for people who love books.  I wish I was the biographer who could spend her days surrounded by books.  Any book which involves book shop, library, reading, writing; I feel like I could enter it and live there forever.  I want to be a part of that book store and read each and every book.  In case you want someone to become fond of books, ask him/her to read this one.  

Certain Excerpts

"One gets so used to one's own horrors, one forgets how they must seem to other people."

There is something about words. In expert hands, manipulated deftly, they take you prisoner. Wind themselves around your limbs like spider silk, and when you are so enthralled you cannot move, they pierce your skin, enter your blood, numb your thoughts. Inside you they work their magic.”



Sunday, 16 May 2021

"The Guest List" by "Lucey Foley"

 The Guest List

By Lucey Foley



Overall Rating:    3

Grip Factor:         3 
Writing Style:      3
Engaging Plot:     3.5
Characters:           3
Satisfying End:    2.5 

You might think you are going ahead in life by bringing harm to people.  You can show love on your face and complete malice at the back and think that you can get away with it but life catches on and punishes you for it.  

Classic Mystery setup:  This is a classic nail biting page turner mystery setup where first we don't know who gets killed and then we don't know who kills.  A wedding party all full of rich, high profile, egoistic people go to a little island to celebrate and end up getting involved in a murder.  Everyone who is part of the guest list has one or the other agenda and is out to kill or let down someone.  

Wedding celebration turned into murder: Talk about an isolated island and a wedding and the first thing that comes to mind is romance.  That is what the initial section of the book is all about.  But when there is so much history behind people on the guest list, there are bound to be some surprises.  The book starts with a hearth throb getting hitched and finally tying the knot.  The story is first revolved around all the good things in a couples life and then slowly the darkness starts creeping in.  

The past always creeps up: The writer has brought up the issues of almost each and every member of the party.  The bunch of bullies who even though have grown up physically still live in the world with a view that they can go around and mess with people.  A section of people who consider themselves to be privileged enough to be able to do anything they fancy doing with even a slightest bit of remorse.  

Predictable: Good read but was predictable at many sections.  Did not understand the location of the wedding as to how come such a remote island where it is even tough to get to could be chosen as a high profile wedding location.  Then there was a huge discussion about a storm coming up which mysteriously went away at the end.  


Friday, 30 April 2021

"The Kitchen Boy" by "Robert Alexander"

 The Kitchen Boy

by

Robert Alexander



Overall Rating:   3.5

Grip Factor:        4
Writing Style:      4
Engaging Plot:    4
Characters:        4
Satisfying End:   3 

Fictional account of Russian Tzars: This book is an account of the last few days of Tzars in Russia, when they were held prisoners by the Red Army and their brutal execution.  This book took me a long time to read because while reading it, I had to constantly keep reading about the exact history of events that happened in Russia.  How the Tsars fell and how communism came in force.  The internet is full of events describing the brutality of the Tsars at the time.  This book is a work of fiction and shows an opposite view of their last few months from the angle of a little boy.  Never thought such a thing could be written for events happening in recent political history.   

Family held captive by the reds: All windows are covered, no one can look inside or outside.  Even a single breath of fresh air can not enter.  People who used to rule were submitted to meagre living and ration spaces.  Eyes of the red army are everywhere and everyone is scared.  How will a little boy overcome the scare and struggles and be brave enough to try and free up and save the family.  Full of constant struggles and scares, the book gives an insight into the difficulties faced by the royal family put in home isolation and then at the end killed.  

Mystery surrounding the actual events: The mystery surrounding the brutal murder of the last royals of Russia is talked about a lot.  This book gives the perspective of the events from the eyes of a kitchen boy.  The writer has humanizes the Royal family but still holds that had their actions been different, things would have been different.  The ending however, is very different from where the entire book was going.  The events which come forward at the end change the whole book completely.  

Some Excerpts

"Whatever you spill by buckets can not picked up by a dropper"



Wednesday, 17 March 2021

Elanor Oliphant is Completely Fine by "Gail Honeyman"

 Elanor Oliphant is Completely Fine

by Gail Honeyman


Overall Rating: 4

Grip Factor:      3.5
Writing Style:   4
Engaging Plot:  4
Characters:        4
Satisfying End: 4 


A mother is supposed to be the biggest backbone for her child,  be responsible for his/her behavior, attitude, manners, present and future.  What if a mother is hell bent on destroying her own child.  It leads to a child with severely broken relationships and broken outlook towards the world.  

This book actually makes me sad and my heart breaks from the simple thought of anyone suffering so much at the hands of their own parent.  It highlights certain important points and serious issues in the society and I would certainly like to applaud the writer on the same.  The character of Elanor Oliphant is strong given the situations.  She has a good hold on her life as far as office is concerned and is able to carry out her own tasks with ease.  She does lack social skills and is blunt but that is not necessarily a flaw.  Something happened in the life of Elanor which left a scar not only her face but also her internal self changing her whole perspective for things.  

The flow of the book however could have been better.  We could easily put the pieces together in the very beginning.  Towards the end when we actually start knowing the truth around what happened, it does not come as a surprise as that is something which one can infer from the various events in story.  The thing that I liked the most in the book is it contained all emotions - Shock of events in her life, sadness that is brought in her life, humor that is brought with her attitude towards life.  Had I been narrating this story, I would be in no way able to bring any humor at any point.  While you are reading you will cry as well as laugh during Elanor's journey.  

There are certain characters which actually stay with you and Elanor is such a character.  I finished this book some time back and still think about her even though the next one I am reading is a love story.  

Saturday, 20 February 2021

A Gentleman in Moscow by "Amar Towles"

 A Gentleman in Moscow 

by "Amar Towles"



Overall Review: 4 

Grip Factor: 4
Writing Style: 4
Engaging Plot: 4
Characters: 4.5
Satisfying end: 4

This book is one of the most emotionally and linguistically challenging books that I have read in some time.  You do need a dictionary continuously while reading it.  Sometimes you get lost in between when it comes to historical references or discussion on great poets or literature.  You need to read and re-read certain passages to be able to grasp the exact reference.  It is tough in the beginning and you need to push yourself till you complete around 40% of the book.  A little girl comes in the life of the count and things become interesting.  That is when it becomes difficult to keep the book down.  

Being stuck, jailed at a hotel for his entire adult life; the count has made a routine and a life for himself.  He moves from being a count to a common man to a father during the course of his stay.  Even being in such a grim situation, he tries to make the best of the life.  His affair with an actress, his discovery of a secret room, his relationship with Nina and his friend Mishka, his camaraderie with the people he worked with, even his regular meeting with Osip; all reflect his attitude towards life.  

The author has taken one location and written an entire book on it with limited characters.  The story and life of the count is tightly built around the life of the Hotel and everyone working in it.  There is certainly a lot of research done by the author while writing the book however, the writing could have been made little more simple.  

Few things which I referenced while reading this book - 
1. Dictionary definitely - This book has all the difficult words possible
2. Map of Russia to get a hang of where everyone is during the story
3. Links to history of Russia specially around the Renaissance 
3. Links to various wines and their composition to understand which would suit which food item

Needless to say I learned a lot while reading this book and also I have always been a vodka fan. 

"Who would have imagined - when you were sentenced to a life in the Metropol all those years ago, that you had just become the luckiest man in all of Russia"

"What matters in life is not whether we receive a round of applause; what matters is whether we have the courage to venture forth despite the uncertainty of acclaim"

"The housekeeper and the Professor" by Ogawa Yoko

 "The Housekeeper and the Professor" by "Ogawa Yoko" Overall Rating:     5* Grip Factor:           5* Writing Style:    ...