BOOKS AMEYA

The City and Its Uncertain Walls review featured image showing Haruki Murakami’s novel resting on a glass table beside a glass of water and smooth stones in soft natural light.

The City and Its Uncertain Walls | Book Review | Haruki Murakami | 2023

The City and Its Uncertain Walls Review Some novels announce themselves loudly. Others arrive quietly and stay long after you think you’ve finished them. The City and Its Uncertain Walls belongs to the second kind. At first, it barely raises its voice. Still, over time, it begins to feel familiar in unsettling ways. In this Read more…

A copy of Candide by Voltaire resting on a rustic wooden table beside a small plant, garden soil, and a trowel, symbolizing the novel’s closing idea of cultivating one’s garden.

Candide | Book Review | Voltaire | 1759

Candide by Voltaire: A Savage Comedy About Optimism and Its Cost Few classics laugh as cruelly as Candide by Voltaire. At first glance, the book feels light, almost playful. It moves fast, piles disasters on top of one another, and treats catastrophe with a shrug. And yet, the longer one stays with it, the harder Read more…

A copy of The Door book by Magda Szabó resting on a wooden table beside an old key, lace cloth, and dried rose, reflecting the novel’s themes of secrecy and power.

The Door | Book Review | Magda Szabó | 1987

The Door Book Review: When Kindness Becomes a Form of Power Some novels ask to be understood. Others ask to be forgiven. As a book, The Door by Magda Szabó asks for neither. Instead, it places the reader in an uneasy position—close enough to recognize themselves, yet never close enough to feel absolved. From the Read more…

A copy of the Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress book resting on a rustic wooden table beside sewing thread spools and a ceramic cup, evoking themes of storytelling, craft, and quiet resistance.

Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress | Book Review | Dai Sijie | 2000

Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress Book Review: What Happens When Stories Are Taken Seriously There are books you admire, and then there are books that feel dangerous in a quiet way. As a book, Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress falls into the second category. It looks small. It reads quickly. And yet, it leaves Read more…

Featured image of the tess of the d urbervilles book by Thomas Hardy, shown resting on a rustic wooden table beside dried flowers and a pocket watch in soft natural light.

Tess of the d’Urbervilles | Book Review | Thomas Hardy | 1891

Tess of the D’Urbervilles by Thomas Hardy — A Tragedy That Refuses Consolation Some novels devastate by surprise. Others devastate because they never stop warning you. As a book, Tess of the D’Urbervilles belongs to the second category. From early on, it signals what kind of world it is about to show—a world where sincerity is Read more…

A Tall History of Sugar book placed on a rustic wooden table, surrounded by sugarcane stalks and raw sugar cubes, reflecting the book’s historical themes.

A Tall History of Sugar | Book Review | Curdella Forbes | 2019

A Tall History of Sugar book — A Review At first, sugar feels like one of the least threatening things in the world. It dissolves easily. It sweetens quietly. It rarely asks to be examined. Yet, as a book, A Tall History of Sugar by Curdella Forbes insists that we look again — and then Read more…

A calming still-life scene featuring a steaming cup of tea and the book The Healing Season of Pottery book resting on a wooden table beside soft indoor plants, creating a serene, minimalist atmosphere.

The Healing Season of Pottery | Book Review | Yeon Somin | 2024

A Reflection on The Healing Season of Pottery book There are novels that arrive quietly, almost shyly, and somehow still linger long after you shut them. As a book, The Healing Season of Pottery has that kind of presence. It doesn’t push; it doesn’t plead. Instead, it settles beside you with a kind of worn tenderness, Read more…

A soft, minimalist still-life photograph of the book Night Sky with Exit Wounds resting on a wooden table near a sunlit window, used as the featured image for the Night Sky with Exit Wounds poem review.

Night Sky With Exit Wounds | Book Review | Ocean Vuong | 2016

Night Sky with Exit Wounds — A Review Entering a World Built from Fracture and Light Some poetry books gently open a window. Night Sky with Exit Wounds opens a wound. Reading this Night Sky with Exit Wounds poem sequence, you immediately sense that you’re entering a space where language has been reassembled with trembling Read more…

A soft-lit featured image for The Postcard Anne Berest review, showing the book “The Postcard” resting on a wooden table beside a vintage letter and quill, with a blurred window and greenery in the background.

The Postcard | Book Review | Anne Berest | 2021

The Postcard by Anne Berest — A Quiet, Relentless Search for the Stories a Family Tried to Forget When I started The Postcard, I wasn’t expecting it to sit with me the way it eventually did. The book moves slowly, almost cautiously, as if it knows that some truths need time before they can be Read more…

A soft, minimalist photo of the Purple Hibiscus book lying slightly tilted on a light wooden table beside a small brown cup and a green leaf, with sheer curtains in the background.

Purple Hibiscus | Book Review | Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie | 2003

Purple Hibiscus Book Review: A Quiet Story About Finding a Voice in a World That Fears It When I began working on this Purple Hibiscus book review, I found myself slowing down more often than usual. There’s something about Adichie’s writing that doesn’t let you rush through it. The story isn’t loud, and it doesn’t Read more…