Category Archives: Yleinen

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows is the final novel of the Harry Potter -series. It includes seven novels. I have read only one Harry Potter -novel before this one, which is the first novel of the series. J.K Rowling has written all the books in this series. On the other hand i have watched all Harry Potter -movies which are based on the books. This and the final books tells about a boy named Harry who has struggled all his life after he learned he is a famous wizard. In this last book Harry is fighting against Voldemort who has killed Harry’s parents and he is about to kill Harry too. Voldemort is gaining support and increase to his power all the time. For Harry to live he has to beat Voldemort and that is not going to be an easy task. Harry and his two best friends start to hunt these ’horcruxes’ which able Voldemort to split his soul in to peaces and makes him immortal. This trio is able to destroy most of these horcruxes but soon enough harry find out that he is one himself. When Voldemort tried to kill Harry, a part of his soul attached to Harry. So for Harry to beat Voldemort he has to die himself.

At begin when i started to read this book it was kind of hard for me. So much new words and sentences whom i didn’t quite understand. But towards the end it started to go much better. In these books there are a lot of weird glossary for example these horcruxes. For me these kind of things are easy to know because I have watched all movies and I have read one book before. I really enjoyed reading this book because i really enjoy Harry Potter series. Though comparing this book against the movie, the books tells everything much more in detail.

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The Hunger Games

The Hunger Games is written by Suzanne Collins. The book is about a TV show called the Hunger Games. In the show there are choosen 12 boys and 12 girls. The boys and girls are choosen from the districts. There are 12 districts and every dipstrict there will choose one boy and one girl. The chosen ones are forced to play the game. The game has only one rule: kill or be killed. Katniss Everdeen is the main character of the book. From district 12 the chosen one was Primrose Everdeen who was Katniss’s little sister. Katniss didn’t want her sister in the game, so she volunteered to the game.  Peeta Mellark was also chosen to the game from district 12. The chosen ones were called tributes. The tributes were taken to Capitol, where they were introduced to the world. When the game started the 24 tributes started to compete against each other. Only one can survival and the others have to die. Every time someone died, there was a sound, a cannon shot. At the end of the game the inventor changed the rules of the game, so that there can be two winners, but they must be from the same district. Eventually Katniss and Peeta won the game and went home.

The book was good but little sad. The beginning of the book really showed what it felt to live poor. When Katniss goes to the game, it shows that humans are like animals and they will do anything to stay alive. The ending was very good and touching. Because when the producers said that there can be only one winner, both Katniss and Peeta agreed that they would kill themselves with toxic berries. Then the producers said there can be two winners and they went home and they were happy that they were alive.

Reading the book was hard at times because I didn’t understand some of the words but they survived the context. The book was good and Suzanne Collins has written two sequels to the Hunger Games series, Catching fire and Monkingjay.

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Shards Of Alderaan

Shards Of Alderaan is one the many books in the ”Star Wars- Young Jedi Knights”-series. Book is written by Kevin J. Anderson and Rebecca Monesta. It was released in January 1, 1997 and it was first in the saga. Theme of the book is definitely friendship and you can tell it by reading the book, four heroes fighting against the evil forces, Shadow Academy. Main characters in the book are Han Solo´s and Princess Leia`s twins Jacen and Jaina. They both are heroes with their friends Tene Ka and Lowbacca The Wookiee.  Their mission is to safe shattered planet from the evil forces of Shadow Academy. Book was very easy to read. The Narrator is omniscient and plot was really easy to follow. Plot was in some cases even a little bit boring. Story and characters were stereotypical. Hero saves the day type of books are not really my thing. Book didn’t capture the atmosphere of the orginal series. But reading experience was okay. Despite the stereotypical characters, they were portrayed well. Connections between the twins felt real. Good things in book where that there was no unnecessary characters. ”Star Wars- Young Jedi Knights” is a big series with one big plot so the first book cant really be over the top. Book was kinda beginning of this saga and it introduced the characters, and showed who are good and bad guys. But for star wars spinoff it was okay. It continues the story of the last film and it takes us to the world of new generation of heroes. But the relationships between all the characters was not so good until the end where Jacen, Jaina, Anakin, Tenel Ka and two enthusiastic Wookiees says: -”To the family” and the real adventure starts. Despite the lack of plot and stereotypical characters book was still entertaining and easy to read. And also it was really fresh to read book in English.

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The Red Pyramid

The Red Pyramid was published in 2010. This Egyptian themed novel is work of Rick Riordan, an American author.

The Red Pyramid is a fantasy novel that has many common elements typical for its genre. Egyptian culture with its gods and pharaohs are great ideas to build a plot around and the battles with spells and magic keep the action rolling fluently through the book. Riordan has controlled the fantasy elements in a way that they don’t overflow the book, which gives a believable feel for the storyline. In my opinion, when it comes to content, The Red Pyramid is very similar to Percy Jackson books, also written by Riordan.

The book tells the story of Carter and Sadie Kane, two British children that get pulled into the world of Egyptian gods and magic. Sadie and Carter are siblings that have been living in different places of the world away from each other, for almost all of their lives but join together again to start an adventure. The main antagonist of the storyline is the god of disorder, Set. Set is as villain as one can get with plans to destroy the earth and rule the universe. Also if you want to imagine magical crocodiles and talking statues play around in the modern world, this book is made for you.

The book is actually a recording of Sadie and Carter are telling their story to the reader. This makes the book really fun to read because the siblings quite often pause the storytelling and start some funny conversations. Sadie and Carter tell the story in their own turns, so you get two views of the events. With more than one narrator a book easily becomes quite hard to understand but this is not the case with The Red Pyramid. Of course there were times when the identity of the narrator was unclear, but it was easy to sort out by taking a look at the top of the page and find either ”Sadie” or ”Carter”.

My overall opinions of the book are really positive. The book at no point got boring with the action rolling the whole time also teaching cool facts of egyptology. Overall the biggest selling point for me was the way fantasy and ordinary things were welded together. On the negative side I was a bit disappointed of the way Riordan handled the ”non-magic” people in the book. All the pedestrians see the Egyptian monsters as everyday animals. For example at the airport everybody except our heroes were seeing a moose when in fact a monster had been released. In every other aspect the book shines and offeres an enjoyable reading experience. I’ll be looking forward to the next part of the Kane series!

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Bridget Jones’s Diary

Helen Fielding started writing the story of Bridget Jones, a thirty-something single woman living in London, as a column in the magazine ”The Independent” in 1995. After that Bridget’s charming character has demanded a wider audience; Fielding has published three books starring her unconventional heroine and two of them have been adapted for the big screen with top actors such as Renée Zellweger, Hugh Grant and Colin Firth. The succes was predictable since Bridget Jones is, without a doubt, the queen of all single women. And probably single men too.
The book I will be reviewing is ”Bridget Jones’s Diary”, but I’ll say a few words about the franchise as a whole.

You could say ”Bridget Jones’s Diary” is ”Pride and Prejudice” adapted to the modern day. Helen Fielding has openly admitted that she ”stole” the plot from Jane Austen, but she doesn’t think Austen will mind (since she happens to be dead).
Many of the characters are actually modern versions of the characters from PaP; Bridget Jones, as the protagonist, is obviously Elizabeth Bennet; Bridget’s main love interest Mark Darcy is Mr. Darcy; her slimy boss Daniel Cleaver is Wickham; and her parents are Mr. And Mrs. Bennet, even though Bridget’s mum Pamela’s storyline also has shades of Elizabeth Bennet’s little sister Lydia’s story.
Bridget, as a character, differs very much from Elizabeth. The protagonist of the Jane Austen novel is more sensible and less lovesick than Bridget, whereas the latter spends her time reading books about self-growth, getting along with men and getting by without men, smoking cigarettes, obsessing over her boss, drinking, discussing relationships with her friends and counting calories. Still Bridget and Elizabeth get thrown in similar situations with absolutely impossible mother (”Bridget, I’m not listening to any more of this. Auntie Una was just saying the other day: if you’d had something a bit more bright and cheerful on at the turkey curry buffet Mark Darcy might have shown a bit more interest. Nobody wants a girlfriend who wanders round looking like someone from Auschwitz, darling”), misleading men and runaway family members.
Bridget also loves ”Pride and Prejudice” and is in love with Mr. Darcy. It’s kind of amusing, when you remember that in the filmatization of the novel Bridget’s love interest is played by Colin Firth, who also plays Mr. Darcy in the TV-serie adaption of the Jane Austen novel (Colin Firth is THE Mr. Darcy and I know most of people will agree with me on this).

Bridget’s friends, mostly Jude, Sharon and Tom, are a big part of the story. Each of them have their own problems when it comes to romance, but they are always ready to support each other and criticise their boyfriends. Actually they all have a really good reason to blame them since somehow they have successed to attract the worst kind of men one can possibly find. For example, Jude’s boyfriend (named ”Vile Richard” by the friend group) has bad commitment issues and makes poor Jude believe that she’s the one being co-dependent and needy for wanting simple things such as a shared holiday with her boyfriend. Other boyfriends aren’t much better and that sort of makes you think about the whole picture. I understand that this is supposed to be a satirised version of single life in London, but is it acceptable in the name of satire that none of Bridget’s friends end up having a healthy relationship by the end of the first book?

The book is written in a shape of a diary, as you can tell from the title. Bridget is mostly a reliable narrator but she doesn’t always understand everything that’s going on even though the reader will understand it all.
Often there is a small statistics of Bridget’s ”accomplishments” in the beginning of the diary entries. Usually they contain Bridget’s current weight, alcohol units of the day, cigarettes she has smoked and something extra. For example: ”9st 1, alcohol units 0, cigarettes 1/2 (fat chance of any more), calories: God knows, minutes spent wanting to kill mother 188 (conservative estimate)”.
Here is one of the biggest problems I have with this book; I understand that women have a huge pressure to look thin, but in what world a woman who weighs 9 stones (about 57 kilos) is fat? I would accept it if it was all in Bridget’s head, but there are some snarks about her informed chubbiness. Is she really, really short of what am I missing here?

As I have probably made clear, I’m familiar with the Bridget Jones franchise, but I haven’t read this book in English before. It was nice to read it in the original language. It was delightfully ”British”, but not in a snobbish way. Many things made more sense when not translated, even thought the Finnish translator had done a great job with this book the first time I read it.
I really like this book and I adore Bridget’s character. This diary is the Bible of all the single people and even thought it may sound weird, Bridget is a suprisingly good role model.
She makes lots of mistakes and is often mislead. For example, when she’s with Daniel Cleaver, who is cheating on her: Even the reader may think that Bridget’s the stupid one, that she should have seen that coming. Then we stop to think about it and we see that Daniel is the one who is doing the wrong thing. Bridget has done nothing wrong. It’s easy to think a similar situation from your own life and understand that you did nothing wrong. People are allowed to make mistakes.
Bridget isn’t gloriously beautiful. She drinks way too much and smokes like a chimney. She’s reckless and not the most clever woman you’ll ever meet. That’s why it’s so easy for us to see ourselves in her; she’s flawed in and out.
It’s good that we see ourselves in her, since she’s, despite or because of all her flaws, absolutely loveable.

”Oh my God. Just took lid off casserole to remove carcasses. Soup is bright blue.”
– poor Bridget trying to cook

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The Fault in Our Stars

The title of the book is The Fault in Our stars which is John Green`s best known novel, published in 2012. Protagonist and narrator is sixteen-year- old girl Hazel Grace who is suffering from a lung cancer.  Main antagonists are Augustus Waters the boy with whom she falls in love, Hazel`s solicitous Mon and Dad, blind friend Isaac and Peter Van Houten who has written Hazel`s favourite book.

The plot summary: Hazel`s parents demand her to attend a support group where she meets Augustus and they fall in love with each other. Turns out Augustus had a cancer too, Osteosarcoma but he is now cancer free after having his leg amputated.  All of a sudden cancer returns and spreads everywhere.                                                                                                 The book did evoke all kind of feelings. I felt sympathy, was angry, smiled, cried and laughed.

By nature Hazel is friendly, shy, maybe a bit introverted, outspoken and a real fighter. At any rate I liked her a lot because she didn’t give up and cared about her friends and family. In the beginning of the book she was a kind of depressed but owing to her parents she anyway went to support group although she didn’t want to. About Augustus I cant say anything bad. He was that kind of boy every girl dream about, charming, complaisant, fun, sweet and just perfect. He bought Hazel flowers, took her to the restaurant, called her and spoke so lovely with her. ” Oh, I wouldn’t mind Hazel Grace. It would be a privilege to have my heart be broken by you” Peter Van Houten was rude alcoholic. At some point I understand him, his daughter died when she was six. But you can`t blame all the people, it wasn’t their fault. Isaac was blind because of his eye cancer and his girlfriend left him after he became blind.  On second thoughts no one had a happy ending in the book. Probably that would have been stupid if everybody just had healed. That is not the reality only few of cancer patients survive. The book was very instructive and I´m happy I read it. It made me think about the life and how you really should enjoy about it while you still can. I wonder if there is life after death. On one hand I don’t think so but on the other hand I don’t either think that the person just disappears…

I wasn´t sure would that be an interesting book after reading the first chapter. At first it didn´t seem all that compelling but after I had read about four chapters I started to like it. The story advanced quickly occasionally. It could proceed like, first they were in America and in the next chapter in Amsterdam. Since the book´s genre is young adult novel the language is the language that teenagers use. There were also a lot of medicine vocabulary which was challenging to understand. All in all the books was easy to follow and it is a pity that it ended. I enjoyed reading it and in my opinion reading in English was groovy and of course rewarding. I learned new words and it was different in a nice way. At first it was a little bit difficult and unusual but then I just got used to it. At the moment I can´t wait to see the movie!

Atmosphere were quite casual. There were a lot of joking although the theme was about sick teenagers but the book wasn’t  too harsh in a way. My favourite part was when Hazel, her Mom and Augustus travelled to Amsterdam to see Van Houten ( Hazel wanted answers about the end of her favourite book). In Amsterdam Hazel did at last dare to show her feelings. Hazel: ” I fell in love the way you fall asleep; slowly and then all at once.” She didn’t want to fall in love because she calls herself a grenade, one day she will explore and hurts everyone around her. ” I’m like a grenade, Mom, at some point I will blow up and I would like to minimize casualties.” Nevertheless she couldn’t  help falling for Augustus and takes a risk.

In my opinion the purpose was to show that even people with cancer can still love and be loved. Their life is hard but at any rate they want to do the same things that normal people do. I think that the people whose life is not perfect ( no ones life is really but I mean the healthiness and family…) are able to appreciate even the small things in life better than those who have ”a good life”. I think everyone should see the bright things in life. But people usually learn to really value something when they know how it feels to lose it. Like in supporting group was said: ”living our best life today.” Sometimes we have to stop and think about what do we have not just about what we don´t . ” The world is not a wish-granting factory.”

I would recommend the books for those who like the love stories ( not just with happy endings) and real life stories. I liked that this story could really be true. I have read and watched many fiction stories recently so it was nice to read something different. The end of the book was a little bit unexpectable and sad. When I started to read the book I thought that it would end differently. It must be yourself to decided what will happen to remaining characters. But still it wasn´t too shocking and during the book there was clues that helped you to decide what will happen to everyone else.

After all I just would like to say that the book is totally worth reading!

 

 

 

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The Fault in Our Stars

I red John Green’s book The Fault In Our Stars which was published in January 2012. The book is a popular romantic drama. The book starts to tell about a girl who has cancer. Her name is Hazel Grace and she is 16 years old.

Hazel’s parents are really worried about her, because she spends so much time alone just reading her favorite book. Even though they know that she likes to be alone and lost in thought. Actually, they are more scared about fact that she will identify too much to the person of the book, because she has cancer too. 

Although the lost in though is the part of Hazel’s personality, her parents made decision that she should join into the group that consist of young people who are seriously diseased. In this group, she met Isac and they became very good friends. One day in the group meeting Isac had his good friend, August, with him. At the first look, she immediately felt attraction to August.

I think this part of the book was the most interesting to read because it doesn’t tell the depressed girl but the girl who had the joy of life around her and in herself. It was nice to read ahead and keep on track and see what will happen next.

August is by nature more outgoing and sarcastic  than Hazel. However, they both like to ruminate issues of life and share their interests. Pretty soon, the pair was inseparable and they were able to share everything to each other. It was nice to read how close they became so in the short time and many things connect them together. They have a chance to experience many things together like a trip to Amsterdam what was about go to spoil because Hazel was so sick and weak.

They were not able to live a completely normal but was supposed be on the alert all the time. Because if Hazel’s situation is getting worse. Unfortunately, Hazel got bad news, something what she never wanted to hear, August has cancer and it had recurred and spread widely.

His condition is progressing really fast, and both Hazel and August know that the “grim reaper” is coming soon. During the past few days, they spent peacefully and were grateful that they had met each other. Also, their feelings for each other are not left with any doubt.

The book is lovely and touching but at the same time really sad like you can tell. It was great for to red how August and Hazel experienced hard but wonderful times together. They still didn’t give up but keep going strong.  I think Hazel grown up so much during this book and came almost a new person. I can only recommend this touching book. Although I think the book was hard to red but it was all worth it.

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Casino Royale

I read the book Casino Royale, which is written by Ian Fleming. The book was published in 1953. As everyone knows Ian Fleming has also written many other James Bond books, in total 14 novels. He has also written two other books Chitty Chitty Bang Bang and Thrilling Cities.

The genre of the book is spy fiction. Main characters are James Bond, Le Chiffre and Vesper Lynd. Other characters are Felix Leiter, Rene Mathis, M, Miss Moneypenny, Q and Gettler. Le Chiffre is the villain of the book who tries to win money by gambling.

The plot: Le Chiffre is a Soviet Union agent who has wasted secret fund. He is afraid that Soviet SMERSH foundation is going to kill him and decide to gamble to get money. 007 is sent to gamble against Le Chiffre. Lynd, MI6 agent Mathis and CIA agent Leiter joins Bond to help him on his mission. Le Chiffre, Bond and other players play baccarat. Bond loses all his money but he gets back to the table because Leiter gives Bond 30 million francs. 007 is threaten to be killed but he is able to continue the game. Bond beats Le Chiffre but he kidnaps Lynd. Bond tries to chase them but he swerves off the road and Le Chiffre kidnaps him too. He tortures Bond to get his money back. SMERSH agent comes and kills Le Chiffre. Bond wakes up in hospital and afterwards decides to marry Lynd. One day Bond finds Lynd dead and Lynd tells in a letter that she was Soviet agent. Lynd made a suicide that SMERSH wouldn’t kill Bond.

The Language was a little bit challenging but still understandable. The story is told by an omniscient narrator. The book was really good and it’s hard to say which is better the novel or the film. It was the first Bond I have read and I think I should read more of them. It was a little bit harder and slower to read an English novel than a Finnish one.

Sources: wikipedia.org

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Coraline

 

Coraline is a fast pace, exciting and timeless fantasy novel written by Neil Gaiman in 2002. It has been acclaimed by many and has also won the top place on several ”Best Book”-lists. It’s popularity raised even more as it was adapted into animation in 2009. Coraline is relatively new novel even though it very much seems like an old classic for younger readers – despite modern technology is somewhat present in this book, such as television and computer are mentioned. However, I think that Coraline’s adventures are so peculiar that they aren’t bound with any period of time.

 

Coraline tells about a girl, after whom the book is entitled, who loves to explore and whose family has just moved to an old house devided into four apartments. On a rainy day, Coraline’s not allowed to play outside so she starts to explore the house instead. She counts all the doors, since her father advised her to. She finds a locked door which begins to interest her but as Coraline’s mother unlocks it, she sees that there’s only a brick wall behind. This doesn’t however kill her interest in it and as the story proceeds, Coraline finds that the brick wall has disappeared one night and there’s a long dark corridor opening in front of her. At the end of the corridor there’s another door which leads to a house, copy of her real home though not exactly identical – everything’s a tad bit better, or so does she think at first. Coraline meets her other mother and her other father who are like parents she has dreamed of. However, there’s a slite curiosity in her other parents – they have buttons sewn to their eyes. The other parents want Coraline to live with them instead of her real parents and sew buttons to her eyes as well. Coraline challanges the other mother to play a game in which Coraline has to find the lost souls of her parents or else she’ll lose her own soul to her other mother. But since the other mother is cruel and loves to win, she tries to cheat. Thus Coraline goes through a battle agains her and is confronted with challanges.

”Flee, while there’s still air in your lungs and blood in your vains and warmth in your heart. Flee while you still have your mind and soul.”

Who or more alarmingly what the other mother actually is, stays as a mystery. Why does she exist? Furthermore, the question why there is such a place in general where she lives, wont be solved.

The narrator in this book is non-participant and limited to the protagonist’s perspective. However, it doesn’t describe Coraline’s feelings and thoughts in detail or regard them as a crusial piece of information. This begs a question whether Coraline is actually so one-dimentional or is this just due to the minimalistic amount of images created from Coraline’s internal dynamics. This is probably why there wasn’t really a character I would’ve identified with.

Given the fact that the narrator makes Coraline maybe a bit ambiguous, the protagonist seems very baffled by the world around her; she doesn’t quite understand it but surprisingly she just acknowledges the weird occasions she experiences but never questions them outloud or demand anwers. Coraline is remote from other people and they all seem to live in their own worlds inside their heads; they’re isolated from each other – not concretely but as far as communication is concerned. Coraline asks something from her mother, for instance, but never gets an answer for the question she presented or, at least, nobody bothers to answer. This may cause annoyance among readers.

Although Coraline is a bit naive, she’s also very clever and I feel like sometimes the reason why she doesn’t bother to question things is just because she has more interesting things to do and see than look for answers for her astonishment from the people around her who probably don’t understand them either. Coraline turns out to very be brave for her age and can push herself to her limits when needed. In this sense, Coraline evolves as the story proceeds.

Although the book is pretty much a one-man show of Coralines, there’s also another character, a mysterious black cat, which involves her adventures. The cat, which I personally adored, is like Coraline’s helper; it advices her (yes, the cat can speak when it’s on ”the other side” of the house) and I feel like it supports her to be brave. It has always something unpredictable to say and kinda has its own laws – it may suddently disappear or emerge out of nowhere.

The book has a simple and clear storyline, and in my opinion, written only to be told, shared to the readers and nothing more. It has no filling. I was longing for the situations to be described and made more interesting through detailed text. Though, these aspects do sometimes occure but mostly when the book is alredy approaching it’s end. Events in this book are followed one after the other in a continuos pace. The story proceeds quickly and smoothly, but in my opinion, that sacrifices the aspects which bring dimension to the story, or else, the ever so unique and fascinating story stays muted and doesn’t really reach the point of greatness it has the potential for.

Coraline is an easy read since it’s for younger readers. Therefore, even though I’m tempted to say it was a bit of a disappointment, the not so winding language is expected – though I didn’t think it was going to be this easy. Also, books which evoke a wide spectrum of feelings and are multidimensional are usually the ones I prefer, but Coraline sadly didn’t have those aspects. The library didn’t have the books available I so wanted to read and some of the authors I was interested in were simply missing, such as Fitzgerald, Lockhart and Doerr. But if you’re looking for a thrilling, adventurous novel just to past the time, then Coraline could be for you. It’s also very likely to forgot that you’re reading this novel in english.

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The Alchemist

”When you want something, all the universe

conspires in helping you to achieve it.”

 

As I was searching for a novel to read for this assignment in the library and scanning the shelves of books written in English, I instinctively felt a force pulling my hand towards Paulo Coelho’s copy of The Alchemist, published in originally in Portuguese in 1988 and later in English in 1993. I didn’t think much of it at first, I was simply glad that I had been able to find a book that seemed fairly interesting and not excessively long. But now after having read the novel I can honestly say that it made me reconsider so many things, having a profound effect on me and my view on life. So maybe it was destiny that made me reach for this book in the first place.

The Alchemist tells a story about a young shepherd named Santiago, who travels with his flock of sheep through Andalusia, Spain. The boy was supposed to become a priest, but his lust for traveling lead to him becoming a shepherd. After seeing the same dream twice, he heads to a gypsy woman to interpret what the boy had seen. The woman tells the boy about a treasure and that it is the boy’s fate to seek it. This leads to a chain of omens, events and encounters, all of which bring the boy closer to realizing his dreams. As the boy learns to understand the universal signs that guide him on his path, he also learns how to listen to his own heart and even how to harness the elements of nature.

The book asks many mysterious, philosophical questions, giving answers to some while leaving others to the reader to figure out on their own. It tells about the importance of dreaming and not being afraid to pursue your passions. There were countless bits in the book worth quoting, but what I feel captures this message the best was the following: ”There is only one thing that makes a dream impossible to achieve: the fear of failure.”

What I loved about the book was the overwhelming feeling of magic, consistent all through the story; the omens, the forces of nature, the pursuit of happiness and the attempt to understand the Soul of the World. At times I could almost hear the desert winds blowing in my ears and envision the glimmer of the stars shining upon the dunes. There were many recurring themes that were repeated throughout the book, giving it depth and working as lessons, making it a learning process for the reader as well as the young shepherd in search of his own destiny.

Even though the book was very brief, it taught me more than anything I’ve ever read before. It is in fact quite difficult to explain in words the impact it had on me. Reading The Alchemist felt like a spiritual journey, prompting me to seek out my own destiny, fulfill my dreams and find happiness, the greatest treasure known to man.

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