Description
A corpse had to be treated. Miss Fable decided to work on that case. No one was ready to take up a suicide case. The writer happened to be a classmate of the victim. In order to save Kush from dying, the root had to be found, also because it was a serious case. Kush is a sixteen-year-old boy studying in St. Patrix High School, Darjeeling. His destiny had written a story which he had to accept. At the age of four, providence betrayed him. Kush lost his mother. He also lost his father and sister. The reality of the story was always regarded as a fallacy because it was too tragic to believe. The story paints a delineation of life which turns out to be lifeless. “Is he dead?” was the question which repeated itself over a million times per day. The story says that accidents make you a stronger person from the heart, but perpetual happenings force you to blame destiny for its villainy. The villain of course is the rumoured hero. Kush lost everything but he found something out of that loss. That something was a story worth reading. A story woven by fallacies which make life resemble an abattoir and destiny the butcher. Life becomes inanimate, raison d’être, fallacy.
About the Author
Kaushtubh Tripathi, a student of Sherwood College, Nainital is presently in class 12. He was born on the 17th of February, 2003. The author aspires to join the film industry. He developed a keen interest in writing after his father’s demise. The author also has a keen interest in poetry, in both the languages, Hindi and English. He began with the novel in August 2019 but stopped at chapter 3. He began with the work once again in January, during his winter break. The author always wanted to be close to literature, the love inspired him to write. After the tragedies that took place in his life, he chose to bring out a tragic novel. He wrote this book glorifying all the unsung heroes susceptible to the harshness of providence. He himself wants the weak to overcome the banter of destiny and write a story absolutely according to their choices. During the annual English Speech Trophy 2019, in Sherwood College, the author spoke about choices saying, “Life may not let me choose my lot, but I’d be happy or not, this is my choice.” The author wrote the book to spread awareness of the above written line.
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