Wednesday 7 June 2017

A book Review

Books have been always my best companions. When I am sad, when I am happy, when I am tired … and when I am sleepless. Most importantly, books are my refuge when reality becomes too painful to bear. In the coming days, I will introduce you to my escorts that helped me last couple of months to go through some difficult times of heartbreak, failure, loss, and disheartening.

The diary of a young girl by Anne Frank


I assume most of you have already read or heard about this book. The story of the little Jewish girl who wrote her diary while in hiding during World War II. The book was on my to-read list for more than 3 years until last February. In addition to messy days I was going through, I had a serious sleeping issue and I wanted to stop taking the sleeping pills that seemed to drag me to depression. To avoid overthinking about my own troubles, I thought reading a memoir would keep my mind busy with someone else’s struggle. So, I went through my "Memoirs and Biographies" shelf on Goodreads. I saw this book title, and I immediately chose it. What can ban negative thoughts better than a real story from WW II can do? However, every time I picked up my e-reader to read my eyes hurt badly (I only had free time at night), and I couldn’t read more than few pages. That was expected after spending more than 7 hours working on a computer. As the story captivated me, I wanted to go faster with reading it. Thus, I switched to the audio version of the book. It was narrated by Susan Adams, who had a nice calm voice that brought Anne to life in my imagination.

Sunday 15 January 2017

A book review

Books for Living  By Will Schwalbe

What I love more than book is books about books
I heard about this actual book before its official release while I was listening to The New York Times Book Review podcast ( the book is now released). I immediately pre-ordered the book on Amazon, and counted down the days... It was worth it. This particular book took me through completely a different experience. In addition to highlighting the importance of reading in our time, Schwalbe discusses some books that left a great impact in his life (sometimes they even changed it). He also shows us how books can define who we are and who we will become after reading them. He said in his book introduction: 

"... there's one question I think we should ask of one another a lot more often, and that's "what are you reading?" ... [it] isn't a simple question when asked with genuine curiosity; it's really a way of asking, "who are you now and who are you becoming"