Book Reviews

Warning: Any form of art from cinema and games to music and visual novels is highly subjective. If there’s one thing I’ve learned toiling away in graphic design is that when dealing with a subjective domain, you can never have “the best” list of anything. The beauty is in the eye (or arse) of the beholder, so they say. Literature is also an art. As such, by no means are these reviews complete, the hard truth, or even an educated calculation. It’s all just opinions. And opinions can change, be flawed, or be objectively bad.

Heavier Warning: Spoilers ahead!

Excellent Books

The Old Man and the Sea
Ernest Hemingway
Hands down one of the best books I have ever read in life. It takes you through a complex, moving journey. It’s an emotional rollercoaster, as they say. It’s well-written, the plot is excellent, and the characters are all so real. The story is about an old man, a fisherman, and what age does to you. At the same time, it’s also about gaps that you can fill with your own struggles. One needs to read this novel carefully and slowly to appreciate what the author is talking about.
Endless Night Agatha
Christie
“Some are Born to sweet delight. Some are Born to Endless Night.” Christie ends the book with this part from the William Blake poem. But in all honesty, this is the entire theme of this suspense crime thriller. It’s a psychological drama, it’s a gothic story steeped in superstitions, and it’s also the tale of a common man who simply wants a nice home. All in all, this is a classic example of how to write a detective novel.
The Call of the Wild
Jack London
I first read Buck’s story when I was a child. It was a book about a dog and how he became the king of (a) jungle. But re-reading a book at a later age has its perks. Call of the Wild is as much about a dog’s story as it’s about how the upper-class exploits (or used to exploit) the sled dogs, so to speak. It’s dark, full of adventure, and of course, a good dog story as well.
The Great Gatsby
F. Scott Fitzgerald
If there is one piece of literature that encapsulates the idea of the American dream, the whims of the rich folk, and the emptiness inside said rich folk, stitching it all up in a tantalizing narrative, then it’s probably this book. You chase, and because you chase, you must keep on chasing. There are life lessons in this book that most people will never learn simply by existing. And so, this is a book everyone must read.
Heidi
Johanna Spyri
I first read Buck’s story when I was a child. It was a book about a dog and how he became the king of (a) jungle. But re-reading a book at a later age has its perks. Call of the Wild is as much about a dog’s story as it’s about how the upper class exploits (or used to exploit) the sled dogs, so to speak. It’s dark, full of adventure, and of course, a good dog story as well.

Good Books

The Catcher in the Rye
J.D. Salinger
I am aware of the flaws of this story. But for some reason, when I read it, it felt unapologetically human and something worth experiencing. It’s a coming-of-age story without all the glitter and fun that you typically find in a young adult fiction novel. It’s serious, gloomy, dark. People who can’t connect with Holden Caulfield will be surprised about why can’t he just come to grips with the reality and, well, grow up. But people who can relate will find his tale all too moving, too real, too painful, and if anything, an understatement.
Treasure Island
Robert Louis Stevenson
Fills you with excitement at every turn of the page, and every maneuver of the story. Well-narrated story about seaworthy pirates, and tells us how they are all human deep inside, with all their flaws and embellishments. The story is wrapped up without any major twist or secret. It’s a treasure hunt story, simple as that. But the plot and the characters are so good that you can’t help but feel like joining them on their adventure, which is a series of awe-inspiring turns and events.
Dracula
Bram Stoker
Great characters, great villain (the centuries-old Dracula himself), and overall a great setting. It’s horror, or some subset of horror. The story begins really, really well. That’s how you write mystery, suspense, thrill, and fear. But over time, though the overarching story is held together really well and there’s a structured narrative, the book falls short of being very reasonable. It’s life and death, and people take actions that are more arbitrary than they should be. Leave someone alone who’s likely to be attacked, why? And if someone has the brilliant, sane idea of protecting someone, that person suddenly doesn’t want to be protected, and it’s fine by everyone else? That’s just absurd. The one-off absurdities and some redundancy aside, Dracula is definitely worthy of the classic title.
Journey to the Center of the Earth
Jules Verne
The sum total of story matter in this book isn’t vast. It’s very devoid of real events taking place, but full of detail and depth. It’s not really reasonable to expect a book from this time to hold up against today’s science. That is to say, a lot of stuff in this is inaccurate and implausible. But Verne didn’t know that and his attempt to be as accurate, scientifically, as possible, really shows through the text. Overall a very enjoyable read, not just for adolescents.
The Time Machine
H.G. Wells
Must have been a banger right there with Martians invading the earth in The War of the Worlds, another classic from Wells, back in the day. Today, of course, The Time Machine doesn’t hold up. But it does try to open our eyes to where we are going. Thousands of writers, filmmakers, and artists have tried to foretell a gloomy future and this novel is easily one of the best examples of that.
Mother
Maxim Gorky
Gorky has narrated the budding of the Russian Revolution. The people are oppressed by those in power. The factory workers are slow to awaken to the realities of life. They pay by blood. And so on. The main protagonist, the mother, is initially uneducated in social philosophy, but becomes an important figure in the close-knit worker communities where she plays a pivotal role. A large part of the book is just expressing all that’s going on through the mother’s mind and frankly, it becomes quite repetitive. But the crux of the novel is how the revolution unfolds, how different comrades have different worldviews of a solution, and what really went down at that time (Gorky being a part of the revolutions himself, being exiled from Soviet Russia and visiting the GULAG camps himself).
Animal Farm
George Orwell
Pigs take control of a farm with the help of other animals and banish the humans. But as they get the power, they neatly rewrite the initial philosophies which can be summarized in their core tenet of, “All animals are equal. Some animals are more equal than others.” Orwell wrote Animal Farm as a parallel or allegory of the Russian Revolution and depicted figures like Trotsky, Stalin, Lenin, and Marx quite well. But deeper down, this is an allegory for any human society. Power is power, and people get drunk on power. That’s the one truth of life, and it’s narrated all too well in Animal Farm. This book is a must-read even if you’re non-political. It’s just too fun and too human, even though it’s about animals.
The Lost World
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
Legendary writing, super-immersive plot, and characters worth cherishing your whole life make The Lost World a fine example of fiction. Especially Challenger, a character written so well and with so many nuances that you can’t take your eyes off the text. At the same time, the story is also about seeking a heroic quest to impress the love of your life. But the main matter is that of the lost world itself, and it’s so nicely narrated that there’s not a single page that can bore you.
Murder in Mesopotamia
Agatha Christie
To me, Poirot is the second-best book detective in the world after Holmes. He has all the qualities you’d expect from a crime detective solving mysteries all the time. The book itself is a spicy, suspenseful tale of a colorful bunch. Thoroughly enjoyable and full of that charm that keeps you reading more.
Around the World in 80 Days
Jules Verne
Another excellent Jules Verne classic that I read in childhood once, and re-read later; it shows just how well-researched a novel can be while being interesting all the while. The adventure follows Phileas Fogg who bets his buddies that he can take a trip around the whole world in just 80 days (at that time, it was quite a feat). The characters are well-written and the events are very colorful, everything from the streets of Japan to riding an elephant in India is just very gripping.
Fahrenheit 451
Ray Bradbury
Written in 9 days on a rented typewriter in a basement. You’d not expect a work like this to be synonymous with our society on such a powerful level. Yet, Fahrenheit 451’s narrative is all too real, all too dystopian. The Firemen burn books, and it’s a crime to have them. We’ve seen this trope many times, most notably in George Orwell’s 1984. But Bradbury takes storytelling to a more intimate, dark, and fascinating level altogether. A very good book to read at any point in your life.
Bridge to Terabithia
Katherine Paterson
Young adult fiction novel on the surface—heart-wrenching and soul-rending stuff between the covers. Bridge to Terabithia follows two kids. Though I have included spoilers here and there in these reviews, this book simply cannot be spoiled. It’s magical and dreamy.
A Christmas Carol
Charles Dickens
Lower rating only because the charms of Christmas festivities don’t work all too well on people who don’t celebrate it. The book is a culmination of life lessons done really interestingly. These are lessons for Ebenezer Scrooge (a very well-written character, by the way), sure, but every human being will become richer after reading this in some way.
The Call of Cthulu
H.P. Lovecraft
I have not read Lovecraft’s books so I have no reference point but as a standalone book (more like a short story than a novel), this is excellent horror. The rituals, the lore, the narration, all of it is spine-chilling. Maybe Lovecraft is good at writing this sort of story, so I can’t say how good this particular story is compared to the rest of his work (which is vast), but on its own, I’d say it’s a very good read.
The Alchemist
Paulo Coelho
There are two camps — people either love this book or hate it. It has a neat take on mysticism and it’s a good hero’s saga kind of adventure overall. I neither love this story nor hate it. It’s good, and that’s it. Whether you believe in following signs as Santiago does or not, there’s no way reading this book won’t be worth your time.

Kind of Okay Books

Firefall
The Picture of Dorian Gray
Oscar Wilde
Unfortunately, I lack the higher taste required to appreciate wine and books like these. This is the only book that I have actually taken the time to review on Goodreads.
Gulliver’s Travels
Jonathan Swift
Gulliver travels to fictional worlds including where people are too big and too small. Under the hood, Swift tackles everything from making the mockery of British expenses for war to the faults of society in general, and it’s a witty story that takes many jabs at all the right things. It’s just that if you take all that not-so-subtle wit out of it, the book is just fine.
The Invisible Man
H.G. Wells
Man experiments with light refraction, becomes invisible, and runs around naked while being angry all the time. The initial mysterious setting of the novel is pretty good but slowly, you see Griffin for the monster he is. The story kind of falls flat by the end (after the mystery and revelation are over), and I did not expect Wells to write a conclusion of a story that was so weak (Griffin wants to terrorize people? That’s it?) even though the subject matter was right there (human experiments, vivisection, etc.).
The Adventures of Pinocchio
Carlo Collodi
A children’s book that continues to be one of the most selling, most translated books ever. It’s about morals and connects with any young mind really well. Mainly, it can connect so well because we see Pinocchio knowing, deep inside, that he’s in the wrong more often than not. And bad things continue to happen to him. So, in a way, the book is a good moral lesson to anybody who reads it at a young age.
Robinson Crusoe
Daniel Defoe
I always like a good story involving the high seas and ships sailing through tempests. Robinson Crusoe is simply a really well-written, well-narrated, and emotional tale about a stranded sailor and how he lives off the land, somewhat like a survival RPG video game. I don’t like all of it though. It’s heavily Christian, and I believe the protagonist keeps making mistakes that are borderline unethical and greedy (though he knows this). But there is depth to this plot and of course, there are the seas.
Wuthering Heights
Emily Brontë
For some reason, I always thought Wuthering Heights was a romantic tragedy of epic proportions. It’s not that. It’s an excellent story about many tragedies, chief among them being romantic in nature, but it’s so much more than that. The book is narrated by various people. And the characters who say things about others are coming from often different perspectives. It makes all characters so multi-layered, complex, and difficult to understand that when you do realize what is actually going on, you can’t help but lose yourself in the story. That is the beauty of Wuthering Heights. That, and, of course, the incessant longing you will feel, the amazing setting, and the beautiful subplots.
The Jungle Book
Rudyard Kipling
It’s a classic children’s book from every angle. Contrary to what most of us think (or used to think, thanks to Disney), The Jungle Book is a collection of 7 short stories and only 3 of them are about Mowgli. Anyway, even though it’s for children, it’s clearly very well-written and comments on human nature in a really subtle manner. Just about anyone can take something away from this book.
Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland
Lewis Carroll
Carroll had a magical way of writing children’s books that will fill you with wonder and excitement. The world is magical, or more precisely, insane and nonsensical, but in a good way. Not everyone likes books that have characters, plots, and events that are not fully rational, but there’s a unique charm in Alice’s adventures throughout the book.
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz
L. Frank Baum
The book is, at its core, a children’s fantasy novel. Short, funny, and wholesome. However, it does have some parallels with the time in which it was written, especially in terms of its political nature. The city of Oz is kind of like the Washington in the US, and there’s a commentary on unequal wealth distribution under the hood. The child will not pick it up, but I guess beyond a point, you can find parallels to many economic, political, or societal constructs in any book written by an adult, as they can’t help but add some reality through their own plots and characters.

Non-Fiction

Into the Wild
Jon Krakauer
It’s a journalist’s investigation into the life of McCandless, who hitchhiked into Alaska to live off the land, purely for the love of wilderness. This story was widely reported at the time. Krakauer retraces McCandless’ steps, goes through people he met on his journeys, and presents all of that to us in this book. You take a peek inside the mind, so to speak. There’s a lot of valid criticism for McCandless (and even Krakauer). The guy had no idea how to live off the land, and his struggles would have been much, much less harsh if he only took a few simple steps. But on the other hand, the book is about an adventurous soul for whom it was more important to be with nature than to be prepared for nature’s fury. Take it any way you will, this is an excellent narration of an adventurer’s life.
Das Kapital
Karl Marx
This book is an update on the original body of work by Marx where he outlines his philosophies and worldviews (Marxism Communism). Whereas that work was difficult to relate to, this version has accomplished taking an older thesis and connecting it to modern realities. Communism is deeply flawed in places and simply impractical in many others, but it does solve some problems. And this book is a good read for anyone interested in learning about those solutions.
The God Delusion
Richard Dawkins
In an ideal world, anyone’s viewpoint can be changed with conclusive, objective facts and thorough investigation. This book is a culmination of such facts, investigation, reasonings, and educated opinions on why there is no God. The book conclusively disproves the God hypothesis, Creationism, and a bunch of other subjects that most human beings are not at the liberty of disproving, or even knowing that it could all be a lie. Alas, we don’t live in an ideal world.
A History of the Modern World
Ranjan Chakrabarti
If you don’t know much about the modern world like industrialization, the American Civil War, Napoleon’s conquests, the French Revolution, the World Wars, etc., then yes, this book is a decent entry point. It paints a roughly approximate picture of what these events were all about without going into too much detail. But if you already know about stuff, geopolitics, and the modern history of the world, this book is 100% a basic overview not worth going through.
The Communist Manifesto
Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels
It’s a politically divisive book if it wasn’t clear from the name itself. So there are two camps. One camp will love the communism talk here, the core tenets of the philosophy are presented all too well (Marx being the father of the movement and everything). It tells one why and how the current capitalist infrastructure exploits the people who should be in power. On the other hand, a lot of arguments here for building a just and fair society are just terrible. This is not a problem of this book, but of communism. For years nations have tried to adapt communism to fit a modern age, but raw communism is something that’s very likely impossible.

World-Building Fiction

Well, of course, these are reviews of novels primarily. That’s because reviewing something like the entirety of Tolkien’s Legendarium or even Rowling’s Harry Potter will be insane. I am not a book specialist. Suffice it to say that once you are through with fiction, you graduate to fiction series (such as Sherlock Holmes). And once you’re done with that, you narrow down on a specific genre and read the daylights out of it. For me, that genre is world-building fiction. If that’s something you might be into, here are my recommendations:

  • Legendarium (5 main books, 6 additional books). Tolkien’s worldbuilding is considered to be the finest worldbuilding even today. Hobbit, Lord of the Rings, and the Silmarillion make up what’s possibly the most detailed, rich, and fantastical story you’ll ever read. Just try to ignore all the Christianism in it.
  • The Wizarding World (7 books). The Harry Potter series is a good starting point for anyone who wishes to get into the habit of reading worldbuilding fiction and fantasy. It has its flaws but it’s also one of the most memorable tales you’ll read in your life.
  • The Witcher (6 books). Andrzej Sapkowski was influenced by many works of art and the local Polish myth. Like many, he tried to create a fantasy world in his later books (the first one being a collection of short stories written as a competition entry). But the end result is marvelous. Geralt of Rivia’s tale is second to none. The Witcher series is the monster hunter folklore everyone should read.
  • The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, The Maze Runner, His Dark Materials, The Kingkiller Chronicles, The Chronicles of Narnia, Firefall, Millennium series, The Hunger Games, and Dune are all on my reading list. The Stormlight Archives, Mistborn, Ender’s Game, Discworld, Dune’s extended series, and The Wheel of Time are longer undertakings that I’ll think about later.

Cancer-Causing

  • Revolution 2020 Chetan Bhagat: A wannabe romantic tragedy that turns out to be an over-cliched love story with no revolution, shallow characters, and just bad, bad writing. I accidentally read this.
  • Fifty Shades of Grey E.L. James: Where is the goddamn plot? I don’t believe for one second that even the learned among the fans of erotic literature actually like this dumpster fire. The pain is not in the bondage, but in your brain as you read this.