Poetry has my heart. I try writing them and I try to read them too and that's when R Kumar’s First breath was offered to me with such a beautiful cover, I couldn't refuse. A lovely cover had the promise of a lifetime in it and I happily picked up the book for reading.
According to the cover- Not all the time, you are at place is made for you. You have to find yours by yourself. Everyone is born with their unique personality and ability. A little spark is needed to ignite a fire of passion in you. Passion is the only thing you have, to make your identity known. Just emphasize on the passion and work, you will get sure result. Power of passion is ultimate. In this collection, some poems will touch your heart, while some will fill your breath. Some are clear like crystal, while some are hazy like smoke. But by the end, I hope that you will get the spark for the fire, you are in search for.
That is exactly what is written on the cover and I copy it word by word. Barring the grammatical errors, I went ahead to read the book. A very small one with only a few poems in it, I could finish it in less than an hour. That is the best part about the book. Another thing which I really liked about the book is the fact that the book is pure and unadulterated. The feelings that the author has, is mentioned wonderfully in the book.
Now, coming to the poems itself. I am at a loss of words. Certain poems are written in a very conversational manner. While that is one way which is currently in trend when writing poetry, the words used are very amateurish. While dealing with sensitive topics, while I understand the need of writing in a simple language, I feel that writing sense matters more.
Certain poems didn't make any sense to me. More like nonsensical verse. They didn't rhyme (not that it had to) but were forced to rhyme. Certain words (and I know I am using certain a lot of times but then, for the lack of a better word) felt misplaced and forcefully used to somehow rhyme. Poetry is an universal language. But here, I was forced to read it in an accent or pronunciation that the writer must've used while penning it down, which doesn't account to good poetry.
Were a few poems, poems or were they songs? I wouldn't ever know. That's because I don't understand the usage of 'hmm’ in a poem or the overuse of 'Hey Girl’ while penning one down. I tried my best and trust me when I say this, to connect to the write-up but the errors that caught my eye throughout the book (as an instance, writing 'decesion’ instead of 'decision’ as a title of a poem), caught the grammar Nazi inside me by surprise. The poems that were about family could only make sense to me from afar.
This collection is perfect for a specific type of people (read: yesteryear youth) who would like to read nonsensical verse (maybe after a heartbreak? And I'm so sorry for stereotyping) and not for the mass. And that's I guess all I can say about the book without going deep in it. Urging the author to read more poetry books and then writing it, I wouldn't really rate this one.
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