Her fearful symmetry
I read a review of this book, a month back, in the newspaper somewhere. I cannot recollect even a bit about what the critic had to say. The name of the author and the cover of the book stayed with me, unconsciously.
While browsing through a roadside bookstore, I picked up this book and bought it for cheap.
Once I started reading, I could not let go. I like her style. Pacy and the word play is interesting.
It was well written. Upto some point before the climax began.
A story that could have been told in a better way. Or rather in could have ended in a better fashion. The characters, the two sets of twins, the secrets and lies, all seemed real. And believable. The story seemed true, happening. Even Elspeths ghost was amusing.
I guess the author got bored, towards the end. She gave up imagining and simply delivered a hasty culmination of a depressing, hurried kind. The characters all showed unreal traits, suddenly.
A ghost mother entered her daughters body, killing her for good and resurrecting herself. A girl who found comfort and peace in her identical twin for 20 years, suddenly detested their mystifying relationship.
A young lover; well, not very young, mourned for his love and then fell for her daughter, their resemblance being the catalyst here. But then conceives a child with his dead lover’s ghost residing in her daughters’ body.
A man suffering from OCD, refused to leave his house, even for one second, finds himself making a journey to another country.
Ah! If only she could have continued writing the way she began. I would pass of this book as entertaining. It makes me sad. A waste of a book that showed much promise
A strong sense of déjà vu clutched me while reading this part where Martin talks about Marijke to Julia.
Maybe I read this bit in the review.
Maybe not.
10:17 AM
|
Labels:
Audrey Niffenegger,
Her fearful symmetry
|
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Pages
Powered by Blogger.
Social Icons
Popular Posts
-
Are we really that shallow and superficial? Or is the result of forgetfulness and the passing of time? It could be the latter, because som...
-
It‘s funny how some people like to state the obvious. Here’s an incident: Evening time, you just left from work. It’s raining cats and ...
-
Turning 23 is not a big deal, says my wise friend. So I explain to him how when you are 22 you are closer to 21 so random acts of craziness...
-
And there is no excuse for not talking to your friends They are not dead are they. But despite all that, Could I have a memory? Let’s say th...
-
Some days are such that you don’t feel there’s anything wrong with them. And then you listen to these songs, and you realize, how empty you...
-
What is better? To be ecstatic mostly and depressed sometimes or to be in a general state of emotional averageness? When your emotions are ...
-
If constructive criticism is given in a destructive way, is it still constructive criticism?
-
A quiet tear rolls down your lips. The faint taste of warmth and salt. A half let-out sigh, And the half inside. Heavy on your heart. Oh! th...
-
At random moments, I think of you, Once, when I was passing by in the train, Once, when I heard Kashmir, Once, when I read my horoscope comp...
-
There are somethings which you know with such crippling surety that you wish there was a doubt.
About Me
Followers
Featured Posts
- angry
- annoying
- assignment
- atlas shrugged
- Audrey Niffenegger
- Auschwitz
- ayn rand
- bored
- Break up
- city
- cousins
- dad
- death
- essay
- family
- father
- God
- Her fearful symmetry
- hindustan times
- Hitler
- interview
- John Galt
- journalism
- life
- longing
- love
- madness
- mary oliver
- mass killing
- OC
- pain
- poem
- poetry
- questions
- ramayan
- rebel
- rhythm
- Robert Creeley
- sad
- savage
- scars
- scary
- spasming
- Star
- suicide
- summer day
- tabish khair
- train journeys
- travel
- weird
- When there is nothing left to burn You have to set yourself on fire
- world trip
1 comments:
you know, you should read her Time Travellers Wife... way better than this one... and one that you would like including the ending!
Post a Comment