Monday, September 5, 2011

Review: Fragrant Flute of Fire by Saswati Das

ISBN #: 978-0-9834102-7-0
Page Count: 80
Copyright: 2011


Book Summary:
(Taken from Amazon)

The book is a passionate journey through varied emotions experienced in human life. It voices from the pain of loneliness and yearning of heart for love to the radiance of such idealism that can transcend all pain and sacrifice all joy for the sake of service above self. It glorifies the innocence of romantic love to the height of divinity and then breaks all barriers of individualism to mingle itself with universal love. This tale of poems worships the strength of youth power, their ardent passion and their invincible courage which is capable of perishing all injustice from humanity. On one hand it speaks of the beauty of friendship, love, hope and purity of the child in us and on the other hand, it reveals the ugliness and evils that exist in our society and tarnish this beautiful earth of ours. It voices the pain of the oppressed and the unfortunate and urges the youth to change this world into a better place to live in. The simplicity of the language can convey its message to people from all walks of life and the depth of feelings reflected in the words can touch even a soul, which has never seen the world through the melody of poems, and make it love poetry.


Mandy's Review:

I'm not going to use my normal review style since this was poetry.  Now, I love poetry.  Give me Keats, Browning, Poe, Tennyson and I'm good.  Their technique, language, flow ... all of it caused their poetry to be wonderful.  I cannot say the same about Fragrant Flute of Fire.

As a matter of fact, I read about half the book and had to stop.  Behind all of the technical issues and choppy rhythms, I could tell the author felt passionately about what she was writing. She just doesn't convey it well enough for her audience.

I would find a rhythm in one stanza and stumble over the next.  There were times I had to re-read what she'd written because I got confused about what she was trying to say.

Don't get me wrong, the author has promise, but she needs to keep practicing and clean up her work.  With the proper tutor, Saswati Das could become an exceptional poetess...

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