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Wednesday, May 7, 2014

The Old Man and The Nymph by Vipin Behari Goyal : A Review




BOOK TITLE: The Old Man and the Nymph
ISBN: -
AUTHOR: Vipin Behari Goyal
GENRE: Fiction
NUMBER OF PAGES: 190
FORMAT: Paperback
SERIES / STANDALONE: Standalone
REVIEW BY: Dhivya Balaji
HOW I GOT THIS BOOK:
          We got this review copy from Blackbuck publishers
SUMMARY:
          The book is based on Greek Mythology which describes four types of nymphs. These are the nymphs of water, clouds, plants and underworld. Incarnated as beautiful nubile girls who were full of passions each of them enticed old man to satisfy their sensual desires. They loved to laugh, dance and had fun in breaking the rules of the society of mortals. What happened when the three of them met with Colonel under the same roof? One of them had escaped from Colonel in her past birth and had gone underworld. What would she do now? A strange story set in Indian context.
REVIEW:
          Straight out, this review is actually going to be a rant. The Old Man and The Nymph has nothing, literally nothing, that it said in the summary except the nymphs enticing the old man to satisfy the sensual desires. It had been 190 pages of pure torture written in crude, explicit language that made readers cringe. The writing of the ‘sensual’ parts is, at best, crass.
          The writing is dismal, the plot even more so. Any reader familiar with Greek Mythology will fume at the injustice. There is nothing regarding Greek mythology in this book except the word ‘nymph’… You aren’t even sure who the nymphs are, or what their qualities are. Come on, who is the cloud nymph, who is the water nymph, the earth nymph, etc? The book made me take out my curly hair in clumps when I read it through.
          Except for writing about beautiful young girls seducing old men, what else has the author written about? Hmmm, let us see… tata daaaa… nothing. It seems like the author had no idea what to write about and he chose dreamy locations and some other such exotic components. But please, don’t damage the dreamy fantasy story of nymphs. When better books are being written about such characters, this sticks out like a sore thumb.
          The storyline is so incoherent that I even lost my sense of language and sarcasm. I am, in short, wordless to describe it. The story is about paedophilic old men who take advantage of young women (aided and abetted by their wives! Every ‘woman’ in this story helps her husband carnally abuse little girl children – It is sad that Indian women have been portrayed like this). One ‘nymph’ is killed, one is smart enough to come out of the grasp, even though she almost slips, and one nymph does not get enough of men. Agreed that the character of nymphs has not always been chaste in all books. But this is one bit too much. All through the story, (written in five parts – that have, incidentally, no connection with each other, and are like confused recollections like REM dreams) the ‘nymphs’ behave totally un-Greek like. They are neither Indian, nor Greek.
          The plot is non existent, the characters are badly written, the story is nauseating, the language is abysmal. This is one classic case of being fooled by the summary and the book cover. Please give this book a miss, you will not lose anything. Read this book and you will lose your idea of fantastic characters like nymphs and Greek mythology in general.
          Blackbuck publishers have given us some fantastic books so far (some titles have been reviewed by Readers’ Muse too) but this one is a major disappointment. You could have done better, blackbuck! Am going to read one of your better titles now again!

WHAT I LIKED: Nope, not a thing. Except maybe the fact that the author didn’t extend this piece by a few more rambling pages.

WHAT COULD HAVE BEEN BETTER: The author could have presented the story for what it was, old men seducing young women irrespective of their reciprocation. There was no need to drag ‘Greek mythology in Indian perspective’ into this.

VERDICT: Give this a miss. Take it from a fellow sufferer.

RATING: 1/5 (because no matter what, the author has taken time to write 200 pages worth of content.)

EDITIONS AVAILABLE: Paperback

PRICE: Rs. 140 for Paperback.

BOOK LINKS: 



1 comment:

  1. Your review is vulgar, book is mirror of society. After Indrani case you should start acknowledging truth, may it be bitter.

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