Wednesday 11 May 2022

Review of The Cord by Sredhanea Ramkrishnan

Book: The Cord
By: Sradhanea Ramkrishnan


Blurb:
“The greatest war we fight is the one within ourselves”, true to these words by Eric Christopher Jackson, ‘The cord’ is a personification of wars waging inside each individual in the turbulent background of 1947, with the imminent partition and the strife-torn Indian nation. As European colonists raided the world and ‘civilised’ the indigenous inhabitants, the mark they left didn’t just stop with the unruly borders and westernized organizations. As India woke up to her independence on 15th August 1947, unfortunately, her sons and daughters watched the dawn, hazed by Indo-Pak partition, communal riots, mass killings and much more. But these gores are no match to the souvenirs left in personal lives and families of the common public of the twin nations. The ones that their subconscious holds on to, till date. ‘The Cord’ follows Jamedar Ashraf Ullah, of the British Indian Army, whose family moves to Rawalpindi, leaving behind more than just traces of his lineage and Major Azad, 11th Kumaon Infantry, who gets a chance to right a wrong he had committed almost two decades ago. What would Major Azad choose? Guilt over duty? Kinship over comradery? or Love over all else? Is everything really fair in love and war?

Review:
The book revolves around the Indo-Pak war of 1947. The situation was deadly and families parted away.
How lives were shattered and each one of them dealt with dilemma.

The author portrays the life of people in armed forces. Their families deal with emotions of loss, war and love.
The characters are portrayed well and have been developed with a strong tinge of emotions and literature.

The words used are simple but the storyline is so damn amazing that one feels lost in the imaginary war zone of The Cord.

I appreciate the plot and flow of scenarios in the book which was a perfect blend of emotions and characterization.

Overall, a must read for all.

🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟 
For the book!!