
Hey there, I am done reading another book that landed into my open arms just like that. My dad actually bought it to read it himself, but as he isn't at home most of the time, I read it before him. The book has a catchy cover illustration and so it grabbed my attention, although honestly it isn't really that difficult for a book to catch my attention.
Now, lets get down to business. The concept of this book is truly marvellous to me, and I have read this kind of book for the first time, though I don't know if another of its kind already exists. It is all about points of view, and the building of the protagonist's character in the readers mind, by putting together a collage of interpretations by various characters that are key witnesses to the life of an extraordinary person. And the most interesting part is, that the protagonist does have to say anything. These various characters, little by little, create the character of Athena, by recounting their reactions to her personality and through incidents key in defining her life and theirs. The characters show a whole gamut of reactions or emotions towards her as per their relation with her like her mother, her student, her teacher, close associates etc.
Till about the 120th page odd, you can't put the book down. But after that, it begins to get a bit preachy and a teensy-weensy bit pseudo. So it can bore one a bit especially someone as restless as me. The ideas expressed are sometimes too stretched, so they seem like gibberish and empty words meant really to inspire awe but not to mean much. Though I must admit, some concepts the author touches upon are quite interesting.
Paulo Coelho has done a good job, but the book could use a little cutting here and snipping there. The book still has heart and is full of good intention. Also the end is a bit much.
A must read for those who are into spirituality and stuff, at least for the sake of opposition.
Rating: 7/10
Thought for the day:
There is always some madness in love. But there is also always some reason in madness.
Friedrich Nietzsche
"On Reading and Writing" German philosopher (1844 - 1900)
Now, lets get down to business. The concept of this book is truly marvellous to me, and I have read this kind of book for the first time, though I don't know if another of its kind already exists. It is all about points of view, and the building of the protagonist's character in the readers mind, by putting together a collage of interpretations by various characters that are key witnesses to the life of an extraordinary person. And the most interesting part is, that the protagonist does have to say anything. These various characters, little by little, create the character of Athena, by recounting their reactions to her personality and through incidents key in defining her life and theirs. The characters show a whole gamut of reactions or emotions towards her as per their relation with her like her mother, her student, her teacher, close associates etc.
Till about the 120th page odd, you can't put the book down. But after that, it begins to get a bit preachy and a teensy-weensy bit pseudo. So it can bore one a bit especially someone as restless as me. The ideas expressed are sometimes too stretched, so they seem like gibberish and empty words meant really to inspire awe but not to mean much. Though I must admit, some concepts the author touches upon are quite interesting.
Paulo Coelho has done a good job, but the book could use a little cutting here and snipping there. The book still has heart and is full of good intention. Also the end is a bit much.
A must read for those who are into spirituality and stuff, at least for the sake of opposition.
Rating: 7/10
Thought for the day:
There is always some madness in love. But there is also always some reason in madness.
Friedrich Nietzsche
"On Reading and Writing" German philosopher (1844 - 1900)

