@Deb

@Deb

Debkanya

206 Reads

In search of my imagination through other people’s words

Followers4

Following13

Joined 2 years ago

India

Debkanya's Books by Status

7 Books

See all
Tress of the Emerald Sea
Three Daughters of Eve
Dinosaurs at the Dinner Party: How an Eccentric Group of Victorians Discovered Prehistoric Creatures and Accidentally Upended the World
A Good Girl's Guide to Murder
It Starts with Us
The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida
The Bastard of Istanbul

Debkanya's Pinned Prompts

Prompt

13 books

What is your favourite fantasy book containing dragons?

Share your favourite fantasy books that feature Dragons.


Prompt

24 books

What books brought you out of a reading slump?

We've all been there—it's easy to get distracted and go for a while without reading anything. But what books brought you out of that place?

rosshardy
Ross Hardy
Supporter

Debkanya's Most Popular Reviews

Quick read. To be honest, given the hype expected a much better storyline. Almost written for a TV show.

View

Very interesting read to get out of a reading slump. Carefully thought through plot twists and vividly imagined story setting - will be very difficult to set it down once you start :)
Can't wait to finish the next parts!

Quick Christmas read - murder, guilt, Cotswold

View

Great concept, unfortunately the title summarises the entire book. Although, if you like a concept explained with a lot of examples (by a lot, imagine a book of examples) this is the right book on the problem of choice for you. The subject matter is a bit gloomy, but that's not the author's burden, it's just a byproduct of capitalism.

P.S. Don't want to be rude, but if you are using the audiobook version to prop up your reading habit - the audiobook makes a great sleep story :p

I generally don't take the time to pen my thoughts after reading a book. This review though is more like an ode to my nostalgia of To kill a mocking bird which had introduced me to concepts like race, friendship etc some odd almost quarter century ago.

I had picked up this book simply to get a chance to live in Atticus and Scout's world again. Discovered that this is a coming of age story in a father-daughter relationship, set in the backdrop of white American southerners reacting to the NAACP. If you have always imagined Atticus on a pedestal and have strong views on utopian racial equality - be prepared to be uncomfortable. But do read if you want a fair account of southern white person perspective on social positions tied to race. Anyways, you always have your curiosity to see what grown up Scout is like to keep turning the pages.

Three stars because will not be a repeat read for me for sure.