Everyone Has a Story” is about a young girl Meera who is in search of a story and but has no idea where she might find it. In search of her story, she comes across Vivaan, a young and successful banker who has a secret desire; that to escape the world in which he lives and travel to his heart’s content. Then there is a coffee shop manager Kabir, who is a friend of Meera’s and is always encouraging her to write. Lastly, Nisha is a girl whom Kabir falls in love with and soon proposes.
As go on reading this book you find how everyone has a past some are good and some worse but every one has its story
Vivan has such a heat breaking past that he was going to marry his lover but at wedding day his lover got accident
The story starts interestingly, with a decent prologue but I remember reading through the pages one by one and still wondering when will it get real? When will the actual plot build up? The part which got everyone hooked, when will it come? Alas! My desires were never to be met. I just kept on reading and nothing seemed worth the time I was putting in and then just like that the story ended.
I remember thinking, “What was it that I just read?” and I kept pondering over what made the book sell the way it did. I had no answers again. So, to tell you all in one simple sentence – The book is seriously over-hyped. There is nothing good in those 180 odd pages.
There were certainly interesting moments in the story but they were short lived. The climax was unrealistic too. The storyline was such that it left many questions unanswered. Had some more thought and work gone into the plot and into pulling up loose ends, “Everyone Has a Story” would have fared much better.
Quotes
#01
#02
“Every day, I woke up, I tried to find reasons to live. Every day, when I slept, I tried to find reasons to not die. Every moment, I tried to find reasons to hope, dream and love. But I never found them. Until I met you.”
#03
“Won’t you get lonely?”
“Maybe. Maybe I will. But a person needs to learn how to be alone.”
“Maybe. Maybe I will. But a person needs to learn how to be alone.”
#04
“I am still not sure what my purpose really is. But I do know that there are days I want to escape the life I am living and grab my bags and just travel.”
#05
“Friends say goodbye to each other. Friends talk. Friends explain things. If your idea of friendship is just walking out one day, you need to go back to school and learn what it really means to have friends.
#06
“It’s our misconception – most of the time – that we live our lives the way we want. Every single step that we take is influenced by others. Only the part that we hide from everyone else and keep deep within our heart, is our own.”
#07
“When feelings are pure and the heart is true, even God is forced to change destiny.”
#08
“Everyone has a story to tell, everyone is a writer. Some are written in the books and some are confined to hearts.”
#09
“We were in different places around the world, and you can call it silly, but it felt as if we were still connected by each sunrise and each sunset.”
#10
“Life is about twist and turns. It is about experiencing everything and anything it throws your way. Some people are here to teach us lessons while other people will be here forever as we grow old together.”
Savi Sharma was born in Surat, Gujarat in 1993. She was studying to be a Chartered Accountant but left studies to become a Storyteller. In 2016, She self-published her inspirational novel, Everyone has a Story which made her India’s first successful female self-published author. Later, she signed with Westland Ltd to write more stories.
She is also co-founder of motivational media blog ‘Life & People’ where she writes about positivity, meditation, law of attraction, spirituality and other such topics. She loves observing people and often finds her stories while observing people at cafes. Savi also has a secret list of 100 wishes which she wants to fulfill in this one lifetime.
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