Ah! Poetry: Book Review
It is a mild
poem,
Feeble yet
stern..
Shredded yet
evinced...
Embossed with
immense emotions
It shines in
dark
When your light
lingers upon it
Pluck these
words with a smile..
The ‘Poem’ is self-explanatory that delves
into the nature of a poem. In few words the poet clarifies how poem writing can
bring respite to an unspoken soul and how the words are connected with thoughts
of the person.
A bit of repetition in can be found in
‘Paradise Lost’ through which the poet describes a part from a refugee’s memory
who has escaped oppression from a battleground.
Through her poem ‘Way To Live’, the
truth-seeking poetess brings guidance to those who feel lost. Her work is a
humble example for the same effort that shows off a simple and irregular rhyme
scheme.
Quirkily, ‘Doors’ closes with a simple
question before the reader, thus invoking their thought process. Its poetess
wonders about the common yet strange character of doors and ponders over why
they act in their typical, never-questioned-before ways of movement.
‘A Little At A Time’ is amazingly short (30
words) and effortlessly says a lot about the trouble with excess of anything,
here love.
‘Neda, Coup d’Oeil’ is a sensitive composition
that focuses on the issue of death of innocent during war.
Deflowered is delicately written from the
point of view of a sex-worker, who finds herself lost and deflowered of
innocence and identity.
‘ Road’, one of the five short poems from
the ‘Palm’ collection, is more like a statement that incorporates no poetic
device save the sixteen words are written in a single stanza; ‘Road’ has a deep
realization in it that makes it admirable.
Four-stanza long, ‘Haikus On Coffee’ is an interesting
art work following the regular pattern of 5-7-5 syllables in every piece
referred to as Haiku (A Japanese form of poem writing).
‘Poet’s Dilemma’ is vivid, hilarious and a
joy to read, descriptive in, delves/dives into the vegetable world,
personifying them all with emotions, ambitious and tasks to accomplish
Mime perhaps takes inspiration from William
Shakespeare’s quote – “The world is a stage”; it also talks about the vastness
of world, “...yet inaudible am I...”
‘Those Papers In My Drawer’ is a beautiful
poem that will make us recall those days when we are constantly asked to clean
the disordered shelves and drawers.
Just after reading the title ‘Billionaire’
I had presumed the following poem would be about someone with a billion bucks.
I was proved wrong. It is one of the most beautiful poems.
Two twenty three pages generously bursting
with imagination, mindsets, and abstract thoughts are an overwhelming compilation
of honest work, belief in oneself and one’s abilities to pen down all the
feelings on paper for everyone to read and interpret in their own way.
The publication could have been taken care
of, in some cases grammatical errors can be felt mainly in terms of punctuation
and unnecessary spaces. The publishers could perhaps revise the next edition.
1 comment:
Thank you for the review of our book :)
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