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A review by architha_thebookishdweeb
The Part I Left with You by Rahul Saini
3.0
Who's your favourite fictional couple?
"Physically or situationally, no one wants to stay the same forever. Such an eventuality can only result in rot. Staying in one place forever - that's the idea prisons are based on"
Love is indeed a strange thing. A concept I failed to understand (immaturity I guess). When we love a person, apparently our world revolves around them. Probably.
'The Part I Left With You' is a beautifully written story of two people who 'fell out of love' and how their lives were reshaped by that incident. This was not done alone mind you. They had help in the form of strangers who turned into lifelong acquaintances.
Lyrical and full of ideologies, this book explores love and human relationships on a different level. I would say that the author based the character Ronit on himself and his ideologies were reflected through him.
Though there were some concepts i completely disagreed with and some unrealistic enactments (nobody says their full name during a casual convo), this book has the potential to be a realistic life lesson to many of us.
Rating -
"Physically or situationally, no one wants to stay the same forever. Such an eventuality can only result in rot. Staying in one place forever - that's the idea prisons are based on"
Love is indeed a strange thing. A concept I failed to understand (immaturity I guess). When we love a person, apparently our world revolves around them. Probably.
'The Part I Left With You' is a beautifully written story of two people who 'fell out of love' and how their lives were reshaped by that incident. This was not done alone mind you. They had help in the form of strangers who turned into lifelong acquaintances.
Lyrical and full of ideologies, this book explores love and human relationships on a different level. I would say that the author based the character Ronit on himself and his ideologies were reflected through him.
Though there were some concepts i completely disagreed with and some unrealistic enactments (nobody says their full name during a casual convo), this book has the potential to be a realistic life lesson to many of us.
Rating -