![]() ![]() ![]() The e-book formatting on its own is a barrier to comprehension. I see no compelling reason to press further to get more meaning out of it. I have pored over it enough to ascertain that it seems to be about a girl, Priti, who is telling a story to two couples who are staying at her house, or "a" house anyway, telling the story of her life and/or the house and/or the city. Maybe if you treat it like some kind of avant-garde, stream of consciousness writing experiment you could get something out of it, but I doubt it. I am unsurprised, but still disappointed. ![]() What does any of this mean? I can kind of follow what on earth most of the paragraphs are generally about, but this is not comprehensible English writing. Or such a piece of speech was a nostalgic memento in her head and heart, so a lasting memory. Because it was heard and talked much, Achhe Din… Good days are awaiting, captivating to any and every in her country at that time, that something was fourteen. ![]() The year, two thousand… something… Month day date, hard to find. Here is another early paragraph: She is the Lord’s Posh Child, a feeling nesting richly in her head, sparsely filled into Lord’s Ordinary Child. Priti understood that they felt it too uncomfortable to spend there at night. They found there a dull-looking house, nothing stimulating in the surrounding. They were fresh flesh, but the dry tone and cold eyes. Did you know you could get this book as a pair of leggings? ![]()
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