Sunday, May 18, 2014

A Thousand Splendid Suns

Title: A Thousand Splendid Suns
Author : Khaled Hosseini
Published: 2007
Genre: Fiction
Rating: 4 out of 5

After hearing all the great things about Khaled Hosseini, and being unable to complete 'The Kite Runner', I was able to read 'A Thousand Splendid Suns' at last. The book about love, hate, sacrifice, compromise, revenge, and the rebound has been wonderfully written.

This is a story about two women in Afghanistan, who are married to the same man. The story starts with Mariam, who is 'haraami', an illegitimate daughter to a wealthy man in Herat. Her life as a child and wanting to be with her father makes her leave her home and makes her change her mind when she sees the reality. Laila, another main character in the book, is a daughter of a professor who believes in women's empowerment. Laila has two brothers who become martyrs in the Afghan-Russian war. She is in love with her friend Tariq, who has lost a leg to a landmine. Both Mariam and Laila end up marrying Rasheed, who is a shoe merchant and believes in Taliban rules.

The book illustrates Afghanistan's struggle through the political changes and brutality of a male-dominated society. The life in the refugee camps in Pakistan, the daily struggles of Afghan people make the reader wonder about the living conditions in a war-torn country. 

Favorite lines from the book :
  • Learn this now and learn it well, my daughter: Like a compass needle that points north, a man's finger always finds a woman. always. You remember that Mariam.
  • A man's heart is wretched, wretched thing, Mariam. It isn't like a mother's womb. It won't bleed, it won't stretch to make room for you.
  • He told her of the superstitions people had about shoes: that putting them on a bed invited death into the family, that a quarrel would follow if one put on the left shoe first. "And did you know it is supposed to be a bad omen to tie shoes together and hang them from a nail?"
  • Because a society has no chance of success if its women are uneducated Laila. No chance.
  • And the past held only this wisdom: that love was a damaging mistake, and its accomplice, hope, a treacherous illusion.
  • This was a legitimate end to a life of illegitimate beginnings.
  • "I'm sorry," Laila says, marveling at how every Afghan story is marked by death and loss and unimaginable grief. And yet, she sees, people find a way to survive, to go on.

Monday, May 12, 2014

The Kite Runner

Title: The Kite Runner Author: Khaled Hosseini Published: 2004 Genre: Fiction Rating: 5 out of 5

This is one of my all-time favorite books. I was blown away by the experience of the roller coaster ride of the book. Khaled Hosseini takes the reader to Afghanistan where the reader wanders into the beautiful landscape, the rich culture, and then the war! I did not know what to expect from the book before I read it. The story is about the friendship between a wealthy boy and the son of his father's servant. I was taken back to my childhood while reading about the carefree days of Amir and Hassan in the city of Kabul. Hassan is an expert in knowing where the kite lands is a successful kite runner for Amir. Both kids are motherless; while Amir's mother died during childbirth, Hassan's mother abandoned him and his father. Amir's father, who he calls Baba, treats the kids equally and buys both of them the same gift. One triumphant day, when Amir wins the kite tournament, Hassan encounters a tragedy while finding the kite. In the second part, Amir and his Baba escape to Peshawar, Pakistan, to escape the invasion of the Soviet Military, leaving Hassan and his father behind. The story continues with Amir makes his life, marrying, and becoming a successful novelist. The twist in the plot is when Amir receives a phone call from his father's old friend Rahim Khan, who talks about Hassan and the Taliban rule in Afghanistan. The story is very gripping and shows us how Afghanistan went from a liberal society to being ruled by religious police. How the lives changed forever for everyone who lives in fear every day. In the end, the story resembles a Bollywood movie. Either way, the story, narration, the beauty of Afghanistan, and the struggle make the book worth reading. Favorite lines from the book:

  • And that's the thing about people who mean everything they say. They think everyone else does too.

  • When you kill a man, you steal a life. You steal his wife's right to a husband, rob his children of a father. When you tell a lie, you steal someone's right to the truth. When you cheat, you steal the right to fairness.

  • It always hurts more to have and lose than to not have in the first place.

  • There are a lot of children in Afghanistan, but little childhood.

  • That's how children deal with terror, they fall asleep.

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

The Longest Ride

Title: The Longest Ride
Author: Nicholas Sparks
Published: 2013
Genre: Fiction
Rating: 5 out of 5

What a wonderful book. Ira's feelings towards the love of his life and his wife of 73 years are very heartwarming. The story is about two couples Ira and Ruth and Luke and Sophia. 

Ira, a 91 years old driving on an icy road, loses control of his car and gets into a ditch. He hallucinates about Ruth sitting beside him and recollecting all the memories of their life from the day they met until Ruth died 9 years ago.

Luke is a cowboy who is managing a ranch with his mother after his father died. Sophia, who is a senior in Wake Forest College meets Luke in a local rodeo show.  They meet as friends and then fall in love with each other.

Both couples who have nothing in common, separated by years, yet somehow their lives converge with an expected ending.

Favorite lines from the book:
  • After all, if there is a heaven, we will find each other again, for there is no heaven without you.
  •  Trust people, until they give you a reason not to. And then never turn your back.
  • If we’d never met, I think I would have known that my life wasn’t complete. And I would have wandered the world in search of you, even if I didn’t know who I was looking for.

The Language Of Flowers

Title: The Language Of Flowers
Author: Vanessa Diffenbaugh
Published: 2012
Genre: Fiction
Rating: 1 out of 5

The Victorian language of flowers was used to convey romantic expressions: honeysuckle for devotion, asters for patience, and red roses for love. But for Victoria Jones, it’s been more useful in communicating mistrust and solitude. After a childhood spent in the foster-care system, she is unable to get close to anybody, and her only connection to the world is through flowers and their meanings. Now eighteen and emancipated from the system with nowhere to go, Victoria realizes she has a gift for helping others through the flowers she chooses for them. But an unexpected encounter with a mysterious stranger has her questioning what’s been missing in her life. And when she’s forced to confront a painful secret from her past, she must decide whether it’s worth risking everything for a second chance at happiness. (Goodreads)

I started this book with great enthusiasm, but the book never kept me glued! Completed about half of the book, but the story failed to captivate me!

Tuesday, April 8, 2014

The Ultimate Happiness Prescription: 7 Keys to Joy and Enlightenment

Title: The Ultimate Happiness Prescription: 7 Keys to Joy and Enlightenment
Author: Deepak Chopra
Published: 2009
Genre: Spirituality
Rating: 4 out of 5

The Ultimate Happiness Prescription shares spiritual principles for a life based on a sense of your “true self” lying beyond the ebb and flow of daily living. Simple daily exercises lead to eliminating the root causes of unhappiness and letting a deeper level of bliss unfold. (Goodreads)

Thursday, March 20, 2014

Dear John

Title: Dear John
Author: Nicholas Sparks
Published: 2006
Genre: Fiction
Rating: 3 out of 5

For once, the movie was better than the book! Though chick lit, the movie narration was good and it was very fast-paced. 

This book about an angry rebel named John Tyree, who doesn't get along with his father, dropped out of school and is enlisted in the army. He is on a vacation and meets Savannah Curtis. Both of them fall in love with each other and John promises to attend her college graduation after a year when he finishes his tour. They promise to write to each other so that they feel they are together every day.

But the incident on 9/11 makes John feel that he needs to re-enlist. John returns home to meet Savannah now married and still is his true love, which is the hardest decision of his life to meet her!

The part I really did not understand was when John meets Savannah after his dad's death, she talks to him and asks him if he can help her clean the dens! Seriously....???

Favorite lines from the book :
  • I finally understood what true love meant...love meant that you care for another person's happiness more than your own, no matter how painful the choices you face might be.
  • Our story has three parts: a beginning, a middle, and an end. And although this is the way all stories unfold, I still can't believe that ours didn't go on forever.
  • Regrets about the journey, maybe, but not the destination.

Sunday, March 2, 2014

The Lucky One

Title: The Lucky One
Author: Nicholas Sparks
Published: 2008
Genre: Fiction
Rating: 3 out of 5

This book was a chick-lit and an easy read (easy-listen rather). This was my second book by Nicholas Sparks. A very good beach read.

This book is about a soldier Logan serving in Iraq, who finds a picture of a woman. No one claims the picture and he keeps the picture and like a lucky charm, he believes that that picture saves him through tough times, or at least all the other soldiers say so. After retiring from the Armed Forces, he is determined to find the lady in the picture. He walks all the way to Hampton, NC. Logan finds that the name of the woman in the picture is Elizabeth. He gets a job at a Dog Training Center which is run by Elizabeth's grandmother. Elizabeth is a divorcee and her ex-husband Keith is a law enforcement officer. She also has a son Ben.

Long story short, Logan becomes their best friend with Ben and falls in love with Elizabeth. It iss all romance for a while and Keith finds that Elizabeth is dating Logan and tries to stop. The end was really curious, but it was definitely predictable. As with any other chick-lit by Sparks, I would read more books by him. This was an audiobook and kept me thinking during the daily commute.

Favorite lines from the book :
  • He was the toast to her butter.
  • Most people don’t know how to appreciate the silence. They can’t help talking.
  • There is nothing like love. You should try it.
  • Always stick to the story. It was when you started backtracking that people got in trouble. Interrogation 101.
  • And believe it or not, she has a phone and everything. She stopped using smoking signals last year.

Friday, February 28, 2014

Stolen Innocence

Title: Stolen Innocence
Author: Elissa Wall
Published: 2008
Genre: Memoir
Rating: 3 out of 5

I love to read books about women who have overcome oppression and abuse. Last year I read three books of FLDS escapees including 'Escape' by Carolyn Jessop. It is hard to believe even in this time and age, people are brainwashed and abused in the name of religion.

Elissa writes about her polygamist family and childhood. She is ordered to marry her first cousin when she was 14 years old, whom she despises. Not knowing what comes after marriage, she is abused by her husband and gets pregnant, suffers miscarriages. She meets another FLDS member and falls in love with him. After Warren Jeffs was captured, she fights FLDS in court. All along she hopes that she would get out of FLDS, but extremely scared to do so.

It was quite interesting for me to read that her parents were converts to FLDS. I was unable to understand an educated man like him was brainwashed into FLDS! She talks about others in the community who she says knew things were wrong and why did not they take any action?

I am glad she has overcome the abuse and hard times and now leading a good life. But somehow her story left a lot of questions unanswered.

Favorite lines from the book : 
  • Evil flourishes when good men do nothing. - EDMUND BURKE

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

The Survival Kit

Title: The Survival Kit
Author: Donna Freitas
Published: 2011
Genre: Fiction
Rating: 3 out of 5

This book was recommended by Goodreads. My first book by Donna Freitas, which was an easy read (young adult and chick-lit).

The book starts with the death of Rose's mother. On the day of her mother's funeral, Rose finds a 'survival kit' by her mom with Rose's name on it. The bag contains a picture of peonies, a crystal heart, a paper star, an iPod, crayons, and a paper kite. Rose tries to figure out the meaning of all those items left by her mother to continue in her life.

Rose has a great group of friends and one of them Krupa who is closest and does help Rose a lot to overcome the grief of losing her mother. Rose's dad turns alcoholic and self-destructive after the death of his wife. Her grandmother is very supportive and caring but rough around the edge. Rose's brother Jim is in college. Rose also has a neighbor who is a senior in the same high school and is a hockey player and a gardener, who has lost his dad to cancer too.

The high school life, dealing with grief, peer pressure, and trying to move forward for Rose was pretty difficult. As she tries to find the meaning behind every item in the survival kit, she finds happiness and clues to look forward to more things in life and let go of her sorrow.

The book was definitely a good read for young adults and not as much for a grown-up. Rose's rollercoaster ride to overcome the death of her mother is written very well.

Favorite lines from the book :
  • Why is it that when we lose something big, we begin to lose everything else along with it? 
  • The girl I am now, this girl--she survived. I just needed a little help getting here.

Monday, February 17, 2014

Unaccustomed Earth

Title: Unaccustomed Earth
Author: Jhumpa Lahiri
Published: 2009
Genre: Fiction
Rating: 4 out of 5

After reading 'The Namesake', I was pretty impressed by Lahiri's writing. So took up 'Unaccustomed Earth', which is a collection of short stories. Loved all the stories, though some could have been less draggy.

Unaccustomed Earth: This story is about a young mother Ruma in a new city. After the death of her mother, her father visits her for the first time. Ruma has never lived her with father alone and has never connected to him. Her father takes care of her son and tends to the garden in the backyard while keeping his friendship with another woman a secret. The father-daughter-grandkid relationship and how Ruma overcomes the unknown fear of living with her father has been written brilliantly.

Hell-Heaven: This is about a housewife and an acquaintance Pranab whom she falls in love with. He marries an American and the Bengali community is upset about him not keeping in touch with any of the old friends, which they blame on his American wife. All the friends are invited to Pranab's house for Thanksgiving after 20 years. The twists and turns after the gathering are interesting.

A Choice of Accommodations: This is about a couple who have planned a romantic getaway when they attend a friend's wedding and it takes a dark turn.

I did not quite understand this story, except for the ups and downs in a marriage that everyone faces. I didn't get what the author was trying to say!

Only Goodness: This is about a woman who tries to give a perfect life to her brother who is an alcoholic while dealing with her parents and their cultural differences.

Nobody's Business: Sangeeta is in love with Farouk and her roommate says that Farouk is cheating on her after a woman calls up home and asks if Sangeeta and Farouk are cousins. The story went on and on without any conclusion.
 
Hema and Kaushik
: A three-story linked with two main characters named Hema and Kaushik. The story intensely deals with life, death, love, and fate. It is a very well-written story about two families and how one deals with death and loss. The way this story ended was totally unexpected and left me in disbelief.

Overall, the book was good and I enjoyed reading it. I like the intricacy of relationships, emotions and cultural differences are presented.

Favorite lines from the book :
  • Megan laughed at such moments, wiping off their hands and faces, convinced that her children could survive anything. She spent her days with people who were fighting for their lives, and could not be shaken by a scraped elbow or a hundred-degree fever.
  • "I'm not planning on getting married any time soon," I told her, and she said that she wished she could say the same for dying.
  • Even my memories of my mother had begun to break apart in the three and half years since her death, the thousands of days I had spent with her reduced to a handful of stock scenes. I was lucky, compared to Rupa and Piu, having had my mother for as long as I did.
  • I had never traveled alone before and I discovered that I liked it. No one in the world knew where I was, no one had the ability to reach me. It was like being dead, my escape allowing me to taste that tremendous power my mother possessed forever.

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Gone Girl

Title: Gone Girl
Author: Gillian Flynn
Published: 2012
Genre: Fiction
Rating: 1 out of 5

I had read very good reviews about this book on Goodreads, NY Times, and other blogs I follow. I am not sure how do I put this book in words!

Amy is the daughter of the author's parents who has written the 'Amazing Amy' book series. Amy is married to Nick Dunne. Both Amy and Nick are writers working in New York City and both of them lose the job. Amy's parents are in bad financial condition and they borrow money from Amy's trust fund. Nick's mother is diagnosed with cancer and his twin sister Go (Margo) asks for his help and Nick decides to move to Missouri with Amy. Amy is a creepy perfectionist. Amy maintains a diary where she records her thoughts and feelings about mid-west life. She is good friends with Nick's mother and her friends. Amy does not have any friends. Nick borrows money from Amy and opens a bar with his twin sister. 

On their 5th anniversary, Amy disappears from home. Nick is the suspect for killing Amy, but her body is nowhere to be found. Amy's blood is in the kitchen, cleaned up, messed up the living room, tea kettle on the stove which is switched on. All the clues point to Nick as a killer. But Amy has planned all this elaborately for about a year and has run off with about ten thousand dollars. Nick gets on TV to plead to Amy to come home. Nick tries to get help from Amy's friends but their involvement does not help either. Amy goes from place to place and clears all her tracks. She watches Nick on TV and not sure if she wants to go back. I won't spoil the plot further (in case you find the book interesting!).

I found Amy very stubborn, creepy perfectionist, mentally twisted, and evil. Nick on the other hand is a normal guy. The book was very slow in the beginning and as I was thinking of dropping the book, it suddenly had a nice twist and got interesting. Then it dragged on and on and on. I was unable to understand the end! I am clueless to figure what exactly was the ending. Now that I have completed the book, I feel I wasted my time with this book. I was very disappointed with this book. And I am not sure if I want to read other books by Gillian Flynn.

Favorite lines from the book:
  • There's something disturbing about recalling a warm memory and feeling utterly cold.
  • But there's no app for a bourbon buzz on a warm day in a cool, dark bar. The world will always want a drink.
  • People say children from broken homes have it hard, but the children of charmed marriages have their own particular challenges.
  • Sleep is like a cat: It only comes to you if you ignore it.
  • Republicans go to Sam's Club. Democrats go to Costco.
  • Love makes you want to be a better man. But maybe love, real love, also gives you permission to just be the man you are.
  • There is an unfair responsibility that comes with being an only child - you grow up knowing you aren't allowed to disappoint, you're not even allowed to die. There isn't a replacement toddling around; you are it.

Saturday, February 1, 2014

The Fault In Our Stars

Title: The Fault In Our Stars
Author: John Green
Published: 2012
Genre: Fiction
Rating: 4 out of 5

This was my first book by John Green recommended by Goodreads after I read 'Me Before You'. I loved loved loved this book! Lots of Kleenex, tears, and sobs and I wasn't ready it close it. This book is about teenagers who are either going through cancer treatment or are in remission. It is heart-wrenching to read the treatments, pain, and kids dealing with the death of their friends. The characters fit perfectly with the story but somehow sounded very mature for their age and thinking. But I kept thinking maybe it was so because of the hardships they go through. Parents of those kids don't have it easy either (no parent should ever go through that).

Hazel Grace Lancaster is a 16-year-old with stage IV thyroid cancer and has been living with an oxygen tank since she was diagnosed at the age of 12. She is on an experimental drug that keeps her tumors shrunk, but she is called "Terminal" all along. She attends a support group at a church and meets Augustus Waters, who is in remission for nearly a year and a half. Gus (Augustus), is charismatic, attractive, and handsome with one leg missing due to cancer.

Both Gus and Hazel have a good time with each other while they deal with Isaac and his blindness due to cancer. Gus and Hazel read a book 'An Imperial Affliction', which does not have an end. Gus, through 'Make A Wish Foundation', takes Hazel to Amsterdam to meet the author of that book, but the main reason was to spend more time with Hazel. Hazel knows that Gus has a future whereas she doesn't. The relationship she has with her parents is beautifully written too. She is sad about her parents going through pain and the issues with money because of her. She is always sad to see her dad cry. The only time she behaves as a teen is When is interacting with her parents.

Humor, death, cancer, loss of sight, love, losing someone you love and know, thoughts about death, afterlife, and funerals through a teen's perspective are written very well. I have read many reviews about this book and the author and pretty much everyone says that the characters are the same in all his books, but his books have really good ratings. I will probably read more of John Green's books.

Favorite lines from the book:
  • Whenever you read a cancer booklet or website or whatever, they always list depression among the side effects of cancer. But, in fact, depression is not a side effect of cancer. Depression is a side effect of dying.
  • Don't tell me you are one of those people who becomes their disease.
  • What a slut time is. She screws everybody.
  • You say you're not special because the world doesn't know you, but that's an insult to me. I know about you.
  • Some infinities are bigger than other infinities.
  • You gave me a forever within the numbered days, and I'm grateful.
  • The only person I wanted to talk about his death was him.
  • The pleasure of remembering had been taken from me because there was no longer anyone to remember with.
  • Pain is like fabric: The stronger it is, the more it's worth.
  • Grief does not change you. It reveals you.
  • The marks humans leave are too often scars.
  • You don't get to choose if you get hurt in this world, old man, but you do have some say in who hurts you. I like my choices. I hope she likes hers.

Wednesday, January 29, 2014

The Unexpected Son

Title: The Unexpected Son
Author: Shobhan Bantwal
Published: 2010
Genre: Fiction
Rating: 3 out of 5

I have read Shobhan Bantwal's books before and haven't been impressed by her writing. I feel that the plot of her stories is good but the narration along the way loses strength and the story becomes stale.

Vinita Shelke-Patil lives in New Jersey and is married to Girish Patil for nearly 25 years and has a 23 years old daughter Arya. Vinita receives a letter from India written by an anonymous person which says that her son has cancer and in need of help and her brother Vishal could provide more details. She thinks back about 30 years when she was in college and in love with a local goon. As a result, she is pregnant and despite her family's pressure to abort, she decides to keep the baby. During birth, Vinita is sick and loses her baby, or at least that's what she was told.

Later she meets Girish, marries him, and lives a happy life. After she receives the letter, her husband Girish is upset that she kept the secret for 25 years and now she is traveling to India to meet her sick son and help him with a bone marrow transplant. Vinita confronts her family back in India for keeping her son a secret and meets her son who was adopted by a couple who live in the same town. She finds out that the adoptive father and the actual father of her son Rohit are arch-rivals and are leaders of two different groups fighting for heritage and could even kill each other. Vinita stays in Palgaum for an extended period of time trying to donate bone marrow to Rohit but ends up malaria. She meets Rohit's actual father and asks him to help his only son, but he denies it. While all this is going on, her married life is turbulent since her husband Girish neither speaks to her over the phone nor communicates through e-mail. Vinita is now worried that Girish is planning to file for a divorce. The end was surprising but stale.

Shobhan has written about Palgaum which I feel is Belgaum, located on the border of Karnataka and Maharashtra, where clashes for language and heritage are still alive today. The middle-class family of Shelkes and the adolescent years have been written very well. Arya's character is very mature for her age and is very broad-minded to accept her mother's past. The coverage of local politics was completely pointless and unnecessary. Some of the chapters were pointless and had nothing significant. 

I was neither impressed with the story nor the writing. I don't think I will read another book by Shobhan Bantwal unless it is exceptionally good.

Favorite lines from the book:
  • Happiness was only a state of mind, a fleeting and fragile condition that could be shattered in an instant.
  • Fate was an odd thing. Events returned full circle sometimes, leaving one helpless and struggling against the tide.
  • Anger is such a wasted emotion when you don't know whether you'll be alive next week or not.

Monday, January 27, 2014

Funny In Farsi

Title: Funny In Farsi
Author: Firoozeh Dumas
Published: 2004
Genre: Memoir
Rating: 5 out of 5

This book was recommended by my colleague who said 'I am sure you will like it and enjoy it', and I did!

A fun-filled memoir of an Iranian, Firoozeh who moved to the US in 1972 when she was seven. Her father who studied in the US speaks highly about the US but Firoozeh and her mother are clueless since they do not have firsthand knowledge of the country and do not know English.

Being from Asia, I could relate to Firoozeh culturally. I had wondered about some of the same things which she mentions in the book (hushpuppies and hotdogs??!). It was good to read the interview by Khalid Hosseini who also comes from similar background culturally.

Firoozeh Dumas also writes about the painful part of the history Iranians lived, when Americans were held hostage in Tehran. It must have been tough on the Iranian community back then when they did not have to do anything with the hostage situation.

Overall, I had a great time reading this book and some really LOL (I mean really out loud) moments in the book.

Favorite lines from the book -
  • At an age, when most parents are guiding their kids toward independence, my mother was hanging on to me for her dear life.
  • I wanted to tell her that Mickey was the reason I was lost in the first place. Had I not been trying to talk to him on those so-called phones, I wouldn't be sitting here. I didn't owe that rodent anything.
  • For American friends, "a visiting relative" meant a three-night stay. In my family, relatives' stays were marked by seasons, not nights.
  • Seeing our puzzled expressions, she showed us a picture of a beautiful, long-haired cat. "It's a Persian cat," she said. That was news to us; the only cats we had ever seen back home were the mangy strays that ate scraps behind people's houses.
  • I now had two hurdles to overcome, fear of water and fear of being in the water with my father.
  • Perhaps the greatest irony in the wave of Iranian-hating was that Iranians, as a group, are among the most educated and successful immigrants in this country. Nobody asked our opinions of whether the hostages should be taken, and yet every single Iranian in America was paying the price. One kid throws a spitball and the whole class gets detention.
  •  My mother learned what she knows about dating from Days of our lives. The only dates my father knew about contained pits.

Sunday, January 26, 2014

The Woman He Loved Before

Title: The Woman He Loved Before
Author: Dorothy Koomson
Published: 2013
Genre: Fiction
Rating: 3 out of 5

Again, this book was recommended by Goodreads. The story sounded interesting too. Somehow I have been reading books by European authors lately and like their style of writing.

Libby (Liberty) meets Jack in a car dealership and thinks he is arrogant. Jack portrayed as a sweet person hunts Libby and long story short, both end up getting married. Jack is still not over grieving over his first wife Eve, who died in an accidental fall. Jack is still in love with Eve and not ready to let go of her. Jack and Libby are in a car accident and series of events happening after the accident make Libby feel that Jack was the one who killed Eve. One day she finds Eve's diaries in the basement and knows she is in danger of being killed too. Eve writes about herself even before she met Jack.

Jack seems like a very loving and caring husband to both Eve and Libby. Libby, even after being married to Jack for two years isn't sure if she took her decision in a haste but sees that Jack is still in love with Eve. Life is really not fair with some people, and Eve was one of them. Despite that, she sounded like a very strong person to put her physical and emotional scars behind after she married Jack.

The book is about love, choices, and consequences of how the present is affected by the choices we made in the past. I liked the way Koomson has written about Libby being confident and how she is shattered about her self-esteem after the accident.  The story was captivating, but the ending was pretty bland. The end was definitely not as strong as the entire book, hence only three stars. In all, I would suggest this for a beach read.

Favorite lines from the book :
  • I would rather have nothing than something that was only alright.
  • Money isn't the root of all evil; the love of money isn't the root of all evil; the NEED for money is the root of all evil.
  • No matter how much you love a man, always have a stash of money that would get you as far away from him as possible in an emergency.
  • When you love someone, them being hurt is worse than any pain that you could suffer.

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Before I Fall

Author: Lauren Oliver
Published: 2010
Genre: Fiction
Rating: 3 out of 5

This is my first book by Lauren  Oliver. This book was recommended by Goodreads and after reading the description, decided to read it. "What if you only had one day to live? What would you do?" caught my attention.

Samantha Kingston (Sam), Ally, Elody, and Lindsay are a group of friends and are popular (in a mean way) in their high school. Sam has a boyfriend Rob and a good friend Kent. All the girls bully Juliet Sykes. February 12th, which is a 'Cupid Day' should have been like any ordinary day for Sam. All of them attend the party at Kent's home that night and end up in a car accident. Then Sam wakes up, only to find out, it's Friday, February 12 again. Sam goes through the same experience of the same dream six more times and tries to analyze the meaning behind her experience and the actions of everyone around her including herself.

Lauren Oliver has a keen insight and a brutal view of high school life including friendship, bullying, cruelty, and carelessness of kids. The first few chapters were not particularly interesting, but in the later chapters, as Sam tries to perfect her last day and analyze people and situations, it gets interesting. Sam tries to perfect her last day by doing things differently to her family, friends, and herself.

The plot was good but felt it was a bit draggy. The story left me thinking, that anyone could go through that, even grownups and it’s never too late to change anything. Even as grownups, we tend to hold anger and grudge towards someone, and if we really think and analyze the situation, people, and ourselves, I am sure one is able to let go of all the bitter feelings.

I would recommend this book mostly to young adults. I am interested to read more books by this author.

Forgot to mention – On page 50, it says “like when you hear thunder and know that any second you’ll see lightning tearing across the sky”. As far as I know, it’s the lightning which comes first, then the thunder! Light travels faster than sound.

Favorite lines from the book :
  • Some things are better left buried and forgotten.
  • Most of the time, one night blends into the next, and weeks blend into weeks and months into other months. And sooner or later, we all die.
  • A good friend keeps your secrets for you. A best friend helps you keep your own secrets.
  • Here’s another thing to remember; hope keeps you alive. Even when you’re dead, it’s the only thing that keeps you alive.
  • That’s the best thing about best friends. That’s what they do. They keep you from spinning off the edge.
  • It amazes me how easy it is for things to change, how easy it is to start off down the same road you always take and wind up somewhere new. Just one false step, one pause, one detour, and you end up with new friends or a bad reputation or a boyfriend or a breakup. It’s never occurred to me before; I’ve never been able to see it. And it makes me feel, weirdly, like maybe all of these different possibilities exist at the same time, like each moment we live has a thousand other moments layered underneath it that look different.
  • So many things become beautiful when you really look.
  • I shiver, thinking about how easy it is to be totally wrong about people – to see one tiny part of them and confuse it for the whole, to see the cause and think it’s the effect or vice versa.
  • The scariest secret of all, the part we’re trying to forget.
  • Sometimes I’m afraid of what I’m leaving behind.
  • I guess that’s what saying goodbye is always like – like jumping off an edge. The worst part is making the choice to do it. Once you’re in the air, there’s nothing you can do but let go.

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

The Namesake

Title: The Namesake
Author: Jhumpa Lahiri
Published: 2004
Genre: Fiction
Rating: 5 out of 5

I have been planning to read this book for quite a while now. Tried to read it two times before but some things in life took priority over reading the book. I had watched the movie a long time ago (and I hardly remember scenes from the movie which is good for reading the book). This is my first book by Jhumpa Lahiri.

Her style of writing is excellent with simple English and made me feel like one of the characters in the book.

Being an immigrant myself, I can totally relate to Ashima and Ashoke about the life they live - missing family, bringing up kids, new things to learn, meeting new friends, adapting oneself to the new environment and the culture clash kids go through sometimes.

The two scenes in the book was very touching to me where Gogol feels what his parents might have felt when their parents died and wonders how did they live here with such courage being on their own. The second one was the last chapter when Ashima is packing up her stuff after selling the house. That is written in such detail that I could see Ashima right in front of me doing everything as I read.

Overall it's a good book. I also felt that it was much difficult to bring up kids in a different culture in the 70s-80s than it is now. But I would think one would enjoy it more if one has a bit of knowledge about Indian culture and immigrant life.

Favorite lines from the book:
  • He is terrified to see his mother, more than he had been to see his father's body in the morgue. He knows now the guilt that his parents carried inside, at being able to do nothing when their parents had died in India, of arriving weeks, sometimes months later, when there was nothing left to do.
  •  For thirty-three years she missed her life in India. Now she will miss her job at the library, the women with whom she's worked. She will miss throwing parties. She will miss living with her daughter, the surprising companionship they have formed, going into Cambridge together to see old movies at the Brattle, teaching her to cook the food Sonia had complained of eating as a child. Se will miss the opportunity to drive, as she sometimes does on her way home from the library, to the university past the engineering building where her husband once worked. She will miss the country in which she had grown to know and love her husband. Though his ashes have been scattered into the Ganges, it is here, in this house and in this town, that he will continue to dwell in her mind.

Me Before You

Author: Jojo Moyes
Published: 2012
Genre: Fiction
Rating: 5 out of 5


"Don't think of me too often. I don't want to think of you getting all maudlin. Just live well. Just live."

Finished the book in three days just because I couldn't keep this book down and while reading the last chapter had to close the book five times just to wipe my tears and get my mind straight to continue! I resisted reading the last chapter so many times just to see how it ended. The best book I have read about true love. Fell in love with Will in the first couple of paragraphs. Lou tries hard to tell him "There is more to life, you just need to see" In all the ways she could keep the hope alive for a better life for Will. The book took me on a roller coaster ride of smiles, laughs, curiosity, hope, and tears. I was panicking and nervous anticipating how the book would end. I wasn't truly prepared for the beauty of this book. As soon as I was finished reading this book, I was ready to read it again!

All the characters are likable and no unnecessary incidents. The chapters from the character's view were good, though I wish there was one from Will's perspective. But guess it was very hard for the author to pen.

PS: 5* - are you kidding me....I would give it a 10!