Book Review # 108 Homecoming : Rubina Ramesh
Blurb:
She
Is Sanaya. Rich and spoilt. A loner. Living in a self-created paradise where she thinks her world is perfect. Where family betrayals are swept under the carpet. In her imperfect life, she still searches for happiness. Then, at the age of seventeen, when she meets the love of her life, she feels that everything would be fine. But Fate has another plan for her. Walking away from your true love is not easy. But what makes it worse is the knowledge that he does not remember her…
He…
Is Krish. A self-made man who knows only one path – that of success. Extremely loyal to those he loves, he is torn between the love for his mother and the love of his life. But then fate plays a role and he is given a clean slate to start all over again. What will he choose… success or love?
The Story…
When two souls are given a second chance they must walk on the path of denial and pain. Of memories that haunt them and heartbreaks that shape their life.
Meet Sanaya and Krish in Homecoming. Who says love is without complications? Especially when the one you love so deeply suddenly becomes a part of your family in a way you had not even dreamt of.
My take :
Review:
Homecoming shares one such tryst with destiny.Sanaya and Krish, meet, fall in love and dream of their happily ever after when something unexpected happen which throws their life, dreams out of gear.
Cut to the present when Sanaya is a successsful pyschatrist, who has to come back to make peace with the past, her family her dad, step mom and sister with whom she severed her ties and went to US. She comes face to face with the person whom she loved all her life Krish, but the shock comes when he refuses to recognise her. He suffers from partial memory loss. How would she cope up with this? Will he regain his memory? How does Sanya and Krish handle the complexities of their relationship? Read the book to find out.
The narration is simple and beautiful. The suspense is well built and maintained till the end. The author has handled the complications of the relationships well and also balanced them with breaking of stereo types. A commendable job.
I would rate this 4/5 for the bold story telling style.
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