Skip to main content

Book Review: How about a sin tonight? by Novoneel Chakraborty


Introduction

  •  ISBN: 978-8-184-00031-3
  •  Genre Fiction
  • Price: Rs. 125/- ( I got this book from the publishers for review)
  • Pages:285 pages
  •  Publishers: Random House Publishers

"We are all a little weird and life is a little weird, and when we find someone whose weirdness is compatible with ours, we join up with them and fall in mutual weirdness and call it love.”- Dr. Seuss. The moment I read this quote I had fallen in love with. Well, yes I would call it love and weird is how I would like to describe my feelings for this book as. I wonder if this quote describes true love to the perfection. For that matter I wonder if something like perfect true love exists in this world. If I am sounding confused – thanks to Novoneel Chakraborty! His book ‘How about a sin tonight” has left me in a daze as I contemplate various things like love, relationships, dreams, aspirations, desires and life at large. 



Behind The book

Source: Google Images
From the most beautiful space in their souls to the most confused portion of their hearts and the dirtiest corners of their minds….Love. Took. Them. Everywhere

It is this blurb that made me choose this book. The description is so vivid that I had to grab it at the next opportune moment. 

About the author

Novoneel Chakraborty is based in Mumbai and he is currently working as a screenwrite. For more details about the author please visit: Blog  and Face book 

Me thinks 

How about a sin tonight ? is a story about 5 people and their process of learning  5 things  - love, lust, learn, like and live. With the Hindi Film industry as the backdrop we have Shahraan, Reva, Neev, Nishani and Kaash who are struggling to survive and carve a niche for themselves in this big bad Bollywood. With each one yearning for something more than just fame and success the struggle turns into a war.

It is very interesting to see the way the story develops further highlighting few lesser known aspects of the film industry. We as viewers are hardly able to judge what conspires behind the scenes as we are too blinded by the razzmatazz. This book promises to be an eye opener. As I mentioned earlier I had selected this book thinking it would be a pure gossip doled out in huge servings but this book is much more than just gossip.

In current world we have a lot of confusion around us especially when it comes to our relationships. We love someone, we love someone else too. We like someone and feel it is love. We want someone and conclude it is love while actually it is nothing by lust. This creates a lot of confusion and chaos in our already chaotic lives.

The author has dealt with this chaos very beautifully. The beautiful aspect of love, like and lust has been very nicely brought out in this book.  Out of all the five my personal favourite character would be Kaash. I am sure every girl would dream of having someone like that in her life. The depth of his love is truly awe-inspiring. It is touching to see his feelings for Nishani which are constant till the day she dies. 


Though the book is full of some wonderful and touching one-liners I would like to share some of my favourite ones here: 

The best way to not complicate a relationship is not letting the other person know that you are already in one with her. Indulge, but never claim. Engage, but never claim. Even involve yourself, but never claim.

It is always good to wait for something in life. I think that increases our gravity towards it. But don’t we always end up waiting for something in life?


(P.S: I have loved so many of them that I intend to do a separate post on them altogether)


Love has been called the most beautiful emotion in this world. But as they say anything in excess turns to poison. Sometimes this beautiful emotion when served in huge quantities can turn poisonous ruining a person beyond repair. It changes the way you look at things around you. The language is very simple and easy to read – easy to connect for the readers.  

I would not call this book as gripping as there is no suspense or mystery element in it. It is about love and relationships and how circumstances play a pivotal role in changing these two things, sometimes beyond repair.  The story has many points of views for narration which sometimes confuses the reader. I would definitely read it again and again only to read the beautiful, soul stirring letters written by Kaash to Nishani as I have fallen heads over heels in love with him. Some people might find this book a bit dark in terms of descriptions, but overall it promises to be a good and interesting read.


Foodie Verdict

Source: Google Images
This book is like a  pitcher of nimbupani. Refreshingly different take on love and relationships  in comparison to all others!

This book has been received from Random House for review

Popular posts from this blog

Book Review: Desiccated Land by David Lepeska

  ISBN: 978-9395481205  Genre: Non-fiction Publisher: Vishwakarma Publications  Bringing together his experiences as a journalist and a keen observer, David Lepeska writes a raw and gut-wrenching book on Kashmir. Part memoir, part travelogue, and part reportage, Desiccated Land is a page-turner.  The book starts by tracing the history of the region along with his own history, as a student who was dimly aware of the history of Kashmir and the turmoil it has been causing for centuries between India and Pakistan. Lepenska takes us to Nilamata Purana ( likely written in the 7th century ) which tells us the story leading to the birth of this region. He also shares an alternate possibility of the word being derived from a lake ‘Mira’ named after Vedic Sage Kashyapa.  His first visit to Kashmir closely followed by his second (and much longer) visit as a journalist working for the Kashmir Observer after the 9/11 attacks, make for an interesting read. Lepeska had questions, a lot of them. An

From there to here to where

From this blog in 2011 to Barnes and Noble website, my reviewing journey has been full of surprises.  I am working on an essay tracing it and realized that I started reviewing books in 2001 (Yes! I am old) for a small library next to my house. Needless to add, my payment was in the books. The library owner also happened to be the first person who taught me how to write a book review and what to focus on. And that is where I learned why reviews matter.  Cut to 2016 when my book review was taught in a Literary Criticism class held by British Library. A relative happened to attend that class and the news spread like wildfire in the family. That is the moment when my family knew this much more than just a hobby. 

Book Review: Never Mind Yaar by K Mathur

Introduction ·          ISBN - 978-0-473-17480-4 ·          Genre: Fiction ·          Publishers: Southpac Publishers ·          Price: Rs. 350/- ( I got this book from Blog Adda for a review ) The title is an attitude - our tendency to feel defeated by the scale and nature of certain problems. Rather than meet them head on, we circumvent them with a sigh and a consoling “never mind, yaar”. When long time friends Binaifer Desai and Louella D’Costa meet Shalini Dayal at Gyan Shakti College, a true friendship that transcends cultural and religious backgrounds is born. Louella is a Christian, Binaifer, a Parsi and Shalini, a Hindu. The novel’s main plotline surrounds Shalini who has fallen for an impetuous student activist, Bhagu. Where does his desire to help the less fortunate lead him? The challenges are many - Shalini’s tradition bound family, the couple’s youth and inexperience and the travails of life in Mumbai, a city the girls love but know, is fraug