The book is
neither lengthy nor impressive, so it does not deserve a lengthy review. People
looking for motivation through ordinary stories, can pick up this. But for deep
sailors it is strict No…No…
Again, like
her first book ‘Everyone Has a Story’, this book too seems obsessed with ‘Story’
stuff. It is written on the same lines. She chose four characters and then out
of four she highlighted two like protagonists and other two remained
substandard.
Basically,
this story shuttles between two lead characters Shaurya and Miraya. The former
is a C.A. student, leaving everything behind he wants to run to Mumbai for some
dreams. On the other hand, Miraya is an interior designer, and her story
swaggers like a drunkard. The particular voice is lost; the author asserts that
people have the power to rewrite their stories. But you cannot predict this
with an array of shallow characters. Isn’t it?
And
thankfully, the author has not plunged into Hinglish or sexual content, on a
plus side her writing style is better and a bit poetic. But soon after it
starts, the novel looks as if the author is pushing the story. This you can
feel especially with the characterization of an entrepreneur called Anubhav. People
who are into reading light books for the sake of increasing their book count
can look up to this book. Other than a catchy title, there is nothing deserving
about this book. Just because the author went on success with her first book,
it doesn’t mean that the following books should be utter crap.
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