book review

Book review-Divine Soul by Ayesha Fatima Muskaan.

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“Love and forgiveness is key to life’s fulfillment”💫

This amazing book is written by my very talented poetess and beautiful writer  @poetrybyayesha. Congratulations sister for your first novel Divine Soul. So glad and honored to review about your book.

It’s an amazing book filled with loads of emotions as you skim through one page after an another. A great book worth reading!.

“I want to sing like the birds sing, not worrying about who hears or what they think.”

The story revolves around two characters Finas and Abhram.The book speaks about a family and how the decisions taken by the elders affect their life and of their children. The family undergoes through various struggles in their relationship, struggle that breaks them and reunites them. So many emotions are packed in this little book. It was a great read surely.

Synospsis

Divine souls revolves around explaining the life of Finas and Abhram .As the first chapter ones we see preparation for the wedding going on .Finas – the bride who is supposed to be excited about her wedding seems quite nostalgic as she is missing her parents on such auspicious event , the siblings have lived quite a tough life because of the irrational decisions taken up their parents in past . The siblings have encountered dislikement from stereotypical society , and due to the wrong decisions of elders they have become innocent victim at times and target of prejudice.Uncle Shroff has been of great help to make the twins and makes them understand , that the battle of life can’t be won easily but slowly and steadily.The novel throws light on many questions in regards to relationships, love , care and on relationships related by blood. The novel hints subtly to the most important aspect that no one is born corrupted but it is circumstances that change a person.

Thank you so much @poetrybyayesha for providing me with a copy to read and review it. I would highly recommend this book to everyone. Each chapter is so relatable and I’ve learned so much from this amazing book.Hope y’all enjoy reading my review. Do comment below and let me know.

About Author

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She began writing at the age of six. When she was just four or five years old, her  teachers had predicted that one day she’ll turn out to be a writer.

The credit for this goes to her darling mother who gave her the English alphabets book when she was just two. At times she also feel that the art of writing within her is inherited, as her family comprises of good and well-known writers. She was never forced to follow the league and was allowed to excel in her  forte.

She got published at the age of 19 in the Poets International magazine. Till today, this magazine is helping her to connect with writers worldwide. She really feel honoured to have worked with a magazine that publishes legendary writers who have won national and international awards for their work. Divine Souls is her first novel and second novel is coming up soon.

If you’re wiling to buy her book #linkbelow

https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/1651792992/ref=tmm_pap_title_0?ie=UTF8&qid=1585702698&sr=8-1-fkmr0

book review

Book review of The Book Thief by Markus Zusak

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Book review of The Book Thief by Markus Zusak.

Written in the most spectacular point of view. Every sentence I read made me want to bookmark it and make into a spontaneous collage of Beautiful Words. But then I realized I was already holding that! This is what the Book Thief is. A delicate balance of the horrid historical time period perfected with Beautiful Words. And a girl who loves books. And an accordion, and a friend. What other way could death be fended off than by words? Liesel tells us. 

” *** THE BOOK THIEF – LAST LINE ***

I have hated the words and I have loved them, and I hope I have made them right. Outside, the world whistled. The rain was stained. ” -Markus Zusak, The Book Thief (528)

Liesel, an orphaned girl, is sent to live with a foster family right beforethe Nazi’s take over Germany.

She has a peculiar attachmentto books, her first being a gravedigger’s manual that she picks up during her brother’s funeral.

Death takes an interest in her and her books on that day and follows her, sometimes constantly and sometimes at a distance.

There’s just something so fascinating about her that Death cannot stay away.

Meanwhile Liesel slowly grows upin the heart of Nazi Germany.

Her adoptive Papa and Mama make her bleak life bearable. But Rudy, her best friend, makes everything right in this world.

A snowball in the face is surely the perfect beginning to a lasting friendship.

But their idyllic lives cannot stay that way forever.Food shortages are rampart,money becomes ever tighter and Papa’s son believes every word from Hitler.

And throughout all of this, Death watches…. and waits.

Even death has a heart.

Whew. I have avoided this one for so long…and I’m so glad that I finally took the plunge.

The Book Thief was just absolutely perfect in that sense. This book was just the right mixture of joys and sorrows, of highs and lows, and of good and evil.

I loved Liesel and the way she grew up against the ever-present tide of Nazis.

The way she and her family struggled against the world, by hiding a Jew or showing sympathy, really made this book shine.

Death made-an interesting perspective, though I wish the book would have been narrated more from inside his head.

Overall, loved this one.Seven thousand stars could never be enough for this book.

What was the last book you brought? I’d love to know + I really hope y’all are doing okay🌸