About the Author- A creative profession and similar
thoughts, I can say that because I have met him in person. Aabhas is a small
town guy with big dreams but he knows how to hold himself on the ground at the
same time. An Architect by profession he has keen interest in Politics. Has an
interest in Poetry and Painting as well, this his second book. (I am still to
read the first!)
Crossing the Line…
‘Fortune Favors the
Brave’ a widely used phrase, aptly relates to the protagonist, and well quoted
by the Author himself.
My genre is mostly
love stories and those from the management and banking background. So I was not
too sure about this particular book, thankfully it was good enough to keep me
engaged till the end…
The tag says mostly
all about the book, Politicians, Bureaucrats and cheap Educationists everything
at first I thought it would be difficult for me to finish this book up, but as
soon as I reached the third chapter my interest increased.
Coming back to
motherland and facing a lot of traditional practices (as an outcome of a rotten
mindset-here they are normally the business malpractices) is something which
most of us can relate to when we come back from a stay abroad.
That, the story comes
from an Architect is quiet evident, and the technical jargons used takes you on
a virtual tour of being one yourself as the language is not too tough and the
content is layman friendly(as it was not too difficult for me to understand).
The revolutionary, career oriented and honest protagonist Aditya, make the
reader wade through the ups and downs of his life and career pursuits and
finally when he is expecting the worst something unexpected revives a ray of
hope.
Well etched
characters, brainstorms and the ground realities bring the pace to the story. Though
there are grammatical errors, they leave the story unaffected.
One must read this
book, to ensure a better insight into the issues of the present day… I felt the
author has written most of the content based on his own experiences, a few phrases
like “fourth dimension of Einstein”, “need for broadening the mankind” etc.
sums up the emotions practically with examples, easily relatable to the
context.
I would recommend this
book to the generation Y for sure.
Love, Lust, drama, the
story has it all. But what can better be related are the questions that have
been asked by the author and those pricking pins that cause the pain to the
society as a whole.
I would rate his work
3.5/5.