Saturday, November 30, 2024

Redemption by Chaitali Hatiskar | Book review

Book review:

The engrossing tale of "Redemption" delves deeply into the intricacies of the human condition. Hatiskar skillfully uses beautiful language to take readers on a journey of self-discovery and transformation.

The journey from the verge of despair to eventual redemption serves as a poignant example of the resilience of the human spirit.

The story begins with Arth sleeping and his sister and cousin surprising him at his home. He was not expecting them abruptly. He was struggling with his own battle under the loads of their past and leading a life of detachment and pain. Arth pushed himself away from his close ones.
 
One day, when he meets Seher, he is baffled to find the same pain in her eyes. Seher had her own share of fights, from her legal battle for custody of a child to financial issues to being a single woman. Their unknown bond of pain makes them fall for each other and share their long-held pain.
 
It is intriguing to read how they open up and show love for each other. The way they learn from each other about redemption and the necessity of self-forgiveness.
 
I loved the scene when Seher, Tara, and Samay are having chill time in the late night after their party. Suddenly, Tara notices a person far away who seemed to be committing suicide. All three of them make a plan to save him but at least risk getting harm from a stranger. When they playfully hold the person, he is none other than Arth. Their confusion and a delegate desire to save a person put them in a weird position. The scene made me feel the pain of a sister and a care for a stranger at the same time.
 
The author astonishingly catches the crude feelings and battles looked at by the two characters. As they explore their relationship, the story stands up to the unpleasant shadows of their pasts, uncovering the feelings of dread and frailties that take steps to destroy them. The unease among trust and misery is overwhelming, as every decision they make turns into a pivotal defining moment in their excursion toward mending.
 
The subject of recovery reverberates profoundly all through the story, investigating and excusing others, yet in addition the need for self-absolution. Arth and Seher's process is one of significant development, where they discover that affection frequently requests penance and that renewed opportunities are never given delicately. A lot is on the line, and the pressure between their longing for association and the weights of their past makes a connecting and profound scene.
 
The writer's emotive composing style rejuvenates lavishly itemised people who are managing complex issues of culpability, pardoning, and profound torment. The author has plainly brought up that we must "fix" individuals. So I have had this misinterpretation all along that the relationship that they share is fairly an injury bond, yet as the plot creates, it perfectly depicts how the characters have taken in the capacity to be sufficiently mindful to embrace their haziness, as Arth says in the later segment: "Maybe life was tied in with simply deciding... He planned to permit himself to stroll towards the light."
 
Overall, "Redemption" by Chaitali Hatiskar felt like a film playing before my eyes. I love reading heartfelt stories, and this book felt like a warm embrace. The book dives into the essential subjects of adoration, misfortune, and absolution. It seemed like a genuine story and not a made-up one.

Purchase Redemption here.

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