Posted in Book Reviews

Book Review #59: Hidden Husband


25832342

Author: Shikha Kaul
Pages: 240
Publisher: Gargi Publishers
Cover Design: Ammol Karambe

  • Ratings-

Cover : 3/5
Title : 4.5/5
Blurb : 4/5
Story : 4/5
Theme : 3.5/5
Characters : 4.5/5
Overall : 3.5/5

  • Characters:
  1. Aisha- The protagonist
  2. Raghav- Aisha’s collegue and husband
  3. Piyali- Aisha’s best friend
  4. Sachin- Raghav’s roommate
  5. Sameer- Aisha’s school-mate
  • Blurb:

Aisha is trapped in her own secret which makes her life hell. Her love for Raghav is true. But hailing from two very different cultures is the basis of their continued friction. Aisha is a Punjabi girl from Gurgaon and Raghav a Bihari from Ranchi. Raghav’s family will certainly not accept a girl from outside their community. And yet, he continues giving her false hopes through his efforts and promises. And then they take a step which entangles her life further. Will she manage to come out of this quandary or must she continue to live in her self-created web? Explore her journey that makes her realize the atrocities being committed on women in the Indian society and the tough decisions she must take, keeping her most loved ones oblivious to everything happening in her life.

  • Review-

Hidden Husband by Shikha Kaul is the story of a girl named Aisha who works in the HR department of an MNC in Gurgaon. She is perfect at her job and is very beautiful too. During one of the recruitment drives, Aisha gets to interview Raghav and he makes it through the interview. Raghav starts interacting too much with her and even seeks her help for finding a PG nearby her house so that he could stay close to her. It was very unlike Aisha to interact and help a colleague on the personal front but when it came to Raghav, she couldn’t help but let herself open up to him. They became fast friends and each knew about the other’s feelings. On the occasion of Raghav’s birthday, they confessed their love to each other and enjoyed a sweet period of courtship.

Soon enough Raghva’s sister, Aruna, came to work at their office for summer internship. As she was an MBA HR student, Aisha appointed her as her assistant. She was very fond of Aisha and Aisha took this as a chance to impress atleast one member of Raghav’s family. Meanwhile, Aisha confessed about their courtship to her parents and after an interaction with Raghav, her parents agreed to get them married. However same was not the case at Raghav’s end. When he visited his hometown in Ranchi after Aruna’s successful completion of her summer internship, he disclosed his love for Aisha to his parents. As expected, they were clearly against it and Aruna even sent a hateful SMS to Aisha, calling her a “bitch” and “a filthy soul”. Aisha couldn’t take in the insult and pushed Raghav to arrive at a conclusion about their relationship but all he asked for was more time. Aisha had begun to hate these four words- “I need more time“. Seeing no progress of Aisha and Raghav’s relationship, Aish’s parents fixed up her match with a Punjabi boy and Aisha severed all ties with Raghav. Unable to bear the thought of losing Aisha, Raghav drank poison but was fortunately saved by being hospitalized at the right time. Aisha too suffered from low blood pressure and had to be hospitalized.

Sandwiched between Aisha and his parents, Raghav decided to take an unpredictable step and seeked Aisha’s approval for it. They secretly got married in the presence of Piyali, Sachin and Anand, their advocate, and managed to keep their marriage hidden from their families. Meanwhile Aisha got pregnant and Raghav was still unable to disclose their secret to his family. As a result of severe stress and insufficient rest, Aisha suffered a miscarriage. She even got to know a lot about Raghav’s family which she had never even in her dreams imagined to be true. She felt pathetic to be a part of such a family and blamed herself for falling into this quandary. Midst of all this, Aisha bumped into his school-mate Sameer, who had a huge crush on her during school days. The course of events that take place post that were worth every minute I spent reading the book. The book will definitely make you realize the importance of family and love in your life, and also that of a best friend like Piyali. The best of the book was the end which gave me goosebumps!!

  • Appreciations:

The entire script flowed smoothly with certain twists at each point. Shikha managed to cover a truck-load of emotions very beautifully throughout the plot. The descriptions of various scenes were crafted keeping intact the thin line between romance and vulgarity. Shikha also ensured that all aspects of the story were narrated, especially Raghav’s side of the story, which was very important to help the readers understand the real situation from both the ends.

  • Let-downs:

The script became a bit boring at one point in time. There were various narrations about a few riots significant in India’s history, which weren’t connected to the plot anyhow. Also there were 2-3 dialogues between God and Aisha, narrated as Aisha’s dreams, which were somehow irrelevant. Again, the mention of religious bias and a letter that she writes to the Prime Minister of India wasn’t really required in the script. A few grammatical errors here and there could have been improvised.

  • Verdict:

Amazingly crafted story with a pinch of reality. (3.5/5)

P.S. Please RATE the post. Hover on the stars and mark it. Feedback is important. 🙂

  • Available at:  Amazon
    Paperback (Rs. 185)
    Kindle edition (Rs. 175.75)

Contact Madhuri for getting your book reviewed: writermadhuri@gmail.com

Follow her reviews on-
Facebook:
http://www.facebook.com/madhurivarmatheauthor
Twitter handle: https://twitter.com/madhu_rv

Posted in Book Reviews

Book Review #48: The Last Surge


Author: Pramit Sarkar
Pages: 202
Publisher: Gargi Publishers
Cover design: Ammol Karambe

  • Ratings-

Cover : 2/5
Title : 3/5
Blurb : 2.5/5
Story : 3.5/5
Theme : 3/5
Characters : 4/5
Overall : 3/5

  • Characters-
  1. Gabriel- The protagonist
  2. Rimi- The protagonist
  3. Sneha- Gabriel’s adopted daughter
  • Blurb:

“…the day we face each other, she will be sorry; sorry for rendering me emotionally impotent. And that will be my victory.” Their blazing courtship was nearing marriage, before fate played its vicious card. Rimi dumped Gabriel and married the choice of her family but Gabriel decided to remain single. Why did Rimi take such a drastic decision? How did Gabriel keep up his single hood? Did they meet again or did fate succeed in keeping them apart? How does Sneha fit into the picture? Crafted with the characteristic flavors of Bengal, THE LAST SURGE brings you the tale of an ace football player turned relationship counselor and what made this protagonist a great brother, a greater father and an even greater romantic.

  • Review-

“The Last Surge” by Pramit Sarkar is the love story of Gabriel Hopkins and Rimi Chakraborty with the plot setup in Kolkata. After Rimi’s parents’ death, she lived with her mother’s sister’s family. Her uncle’s younger brother considered Rimi as his daughter and she too lovingly called him “baba”. Gabriel and Rimi’s cousin Shayok were football players for different teams. For one of their matches, Rimi steals Gabriel’s shoes so as to prevent him from playing and ensure that her brother’s team wins the game. When Gabriel sets on a mission to find his offender, he accidentally bumps into Rimi. Not knowing that she is the offender he is looking out for, he falls for her. But even after realizing that Rimi had stolen his shoes to make her brother win the game, he is unable to understand his feelings for her. The obvious reaction for him would be to get angry, but he is unable to understand why that wasn’t the case with him. How much ever he tried, he couldn’t get angry with her. Finally his sister Esabelle makes him realize that the feelings he is going through is called Love! And hence the conversation between Rimi and Gabriel got initiated through letter writing. It was an easy transition into a relationship and Gabriel decided to introduce her to his parents. Fearing that his parents might not like her, she agrees to meet just his sister. But on the D-day, her uncle falls ill and she prefers staying at home to be with the family.

Later Rimi’s marriage gets fixed but she is adamant on marrying Gabriel only. Taking this as an offence, her uncle and aunt start disregarding her and at the same time her baba falls ill and eventually dies. Giving in to her family’s situations and their expectations from her, she decides to marry her family’s choice. Gabriel on the other hand is unable to accept her infidelity and decides not to get married ever after failing in his attempt of curbing his love for Rimi by resorting to lust with a prostitute. Many years later when Sneha gets to know the entire story of her father from Esabelle, she ensures that Gabriel and Rimi meet atleast once to sort out their decades old differences and clear their misunderstanding. The climax will make you anticipate the obvious but the actual story will turn out completely differently.

  • Appreciations:

Amazing vocabulary and perfect grammar. Sketching the entire list of all characters at the beginning of the book was very thoughtful of Pramit. The explanation of every relation’s word used in Hindi / Bengali language will be helpful to readers who are unaware of the words. Awesome use of metaphor for almost everything. Feelings have been portrayed really well. The flow of the plot is good and the turn of events so as to maintain a tinge of anticipation on what will happen next is commendable.

  • Let-downs:

There were a few times when the narration was absurd, as in it would become difficult to understand what exactly was going on in the plot, especially at the beginning of a particular scene, which negatively affected the narration style and connection with the readers. The end is a little abrupt, it could have been improvised by choosing a different course for the plot but eventually ending the story in the same way – but then again, it is my personal opinion and someone else might feel otherwise. 🙂

  • Verdict:

Typical Bollywood style story-line, a good read. (3/5)

P.S. Please RATE the post. Hover on the stars and mark it. Feedback is important. 🙂

  • Available at: Amazon (Rs. 161)

Contact Madhuri for getting your book reviewed: writermadhuri@gmail.com

Follow her reviews on-
Facebook:
http://www.facebook.com/madhurivarmatheauthor
Twitter handle: https://twitter.com/madhu_rv