Book Review by #LITEROMA PUBLISHING SERVICES :: ‘Love Trilogy - Who to Complain’ by Devi Raghuvanshi
** Thanks to the author for gifting us a review copy of the book.**
** Thanks to our reviewer Reetwika Banerjee for reviewing the book on behalf of #Literoma. **
‘Love Trilogy - Who to Complain’ is the second published book by Devi Raghuvanshi from Partridge Publishing. The story, written in a conversational style mostly, revolves around his protagonist Ajit, a 20 years enthusiastic fellow, who is in deep bonds with Sudha. Though the central characters choose not to marry but they do share an eternal chemistry. The free flowing descriptions of their complex relationship create an everlasting impact on reader's mind.
The novel starts with a weird habit of Ajit who sheds saliva while sleeping and is not unfamiliar to his family too. The sloppy side of Ajit established in the beginning of the story gets slowly challenged when later he confronts about rapist Rehman. Ajit's character slowly takes a stronger shape as we move along the story.
The novel comprises of 46 chapters, few are titled, few purposely left untitled. That might be a new style, but a uniform naming convention would perhaps give a smoother reading experience. The text alignment and formatting could have been better. Since the size of the book is small, at places where conversations start, the additional bullet space after hyphen (-) gives an impression of a nonfiction book.
Overall, I will be rating the book as 4*/5* and recommend for young adults.
** Thanks to our reviewer Reetwika Banerjee for reviewing the book on behalf of #Literoma. **
‘Love Trilogy - Who to Complain’ is the second published book by Devi Raghuvanshi from Partridge Publishing. The story, written in a conversational style mostly, revolves around his protagonist Ajit, a 20 years enthusiastic fellow, who is in deep bonds with Sudha. Though the central characters choose not to marry but they do share an eternal chemistry. The free flowing descriptions of their complex relationship create an everlasting impact on reader's mind.
The novel starts with a weird habit of Ajit who sheds saliva while sleeping and is not unfamiliar to his family too. The sloppy side of Ajit established in the beginning of the story gets slowly challenged when later he confronts about rapist Rehman. Ajit's character slowly takes a stronger shape as we move along the story.
The novel comprises of 46 chapters, few are titled, few purposely left untitled. That might be a new style, but a uniform naming convention would perhaps give a smoother reading experience. The text alignment and formatting could have been better. Since the size of the book is small, at places where conversations start, the additional bullet space after hyphen (-) gives an impression of a nonfiction book.
Overall, I will be rating the book as 4*/5* and recommend for young adults.
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