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Lost Edges Perfect Paperback – 19 April 2023
- Kindle Edition
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- Print length280 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherVineeth Chandran Poovathikkal
- Publication date19 April 2023
- ISBN-109358111011
- ISBN-13978-9358111019
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Product details
- Publisher : Vineeth Chandran Poovathikkal; First Edition (19 April 2023)
- Language : English
- Perfect Paperback : 280 pages
- ISBN-10 : 9358111011
- ISBN-13 : 978-9358111019
- Item Weight : 310 g
- Country of Origin : India
- Best Sellers Rank: #18,863 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #1,580 in Contemporary Fiction (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Salini Vineeth is a fiction writer and travel blogger based out in Bangalore, India. Her latest book is Magic Square - an English Novella. She is an engineering graduate from BITS Pilani, Goa. She later completed MTech from IIIT-Bangalore. While working as an electronics engineer, Salini started her travel website Pick, Pack, Go in 2014. (http://www.pickpackgo.in/) Salini entered the self publishing arena with her first book, a travel guide for Hampi. It is available in Amazon.
Salini is a history buff and ardent fan of mystery novels. One of her proudest achievements is completing the entire Shelock Holmes works by Sir Aurthur Conan Doyle. She adores Sherlock Holmes.
She also has travelled across India, visiting most of the historical destinations. Salini also takes a keen interest in ancient Indian architecture and philosophy.
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👍Nice book.. Book kept me hooked..
Emotions are very strong.
Eventhough multiple momemts between leads brought tears to my eyes, the standout for me was the One between 2 brothers.. Moment Ravi saw himself in Hari.. And Hari mentioning he don't have anyone else other than Ravi..
Now coming to the way the book dealt with mental health and the tabue around consulting a therapist was on point. You very beautifully articulated it through the lead characters.
Yes, its very important we take care of mental wellness equally with our physical wellness.
We should stop putting a brave face when our inner self is burning.
Great Work .. Wont call it a feel good romantic novel but a wondefully articulated love story with emotional rollercoaster.. Showing the grey shades as it is and practical .. A ray of hope at the end..
A must Read..
The central characters Ravi & Geetanjali. Both of them have grey shades; they aren’t perfect individuals and therefore they seem real. The characters remain consistent throughout the book and I’m glad the author didn’t tweak the end to suit any Bollywood cliches.
The sensitivity with which mental health issues are handled. We are prone to seeing men in books as strong but they can be vulnerable too. The author has taken extreme care to discuss mental health using the right terminologies and has not just used them as a trope to get the story ahead.
The authenticity of the places where the story takes places: whether it’s Goa or Bolpur or Bangalore. There is a texture, feel and mood to each place and that comes out in the book clearly.
If you’re looking for a nuanced relationship drama, this one is for you.
Both Ravi and Geethu have a striking similarity in the form of their dominating parents, who play an important role in giving the story a context.
However, the opening chapter starts in Dr Amit's counselling clinic in Bangalore. In the present day, Ravi and Geethu are married but not staying together. They're not in good terms. They can't even face each other, truth be said.
Ravi is jobless, financially broke after failing miserably in a start-up; Geetanjali is in a high-rung corporate managerial position after being a gold medalist in IIM-B.
How did they land in this current situation after more than a decade of relationship, being love birds to lost souls, with Geethu even contemplating a divorce?
The author thus sets an interesting premise and foundation for some soul searching between the couples and high-voltage relationship drama in a typical Bollywood masala-style formulaic pattern.
Lost edges is a painting parlance denoting where the boundaries blur as the change in shapes takes place. A good choice indeed for a novel title. But did it satisfy your as a reader?
I would say in bits and pieces, the narration was good. Even though it's a drama, the novel was fast-paced. Editing/editor has to be given its/his due credit.
However, I found both the main characters so unidimensional in its conception with emotion playing a spoilsport.
The best yet short episodes of this novel involve two mature men — Geethu's father, and his interaction with his long-unseen daughter in Bolpur, and Prof. Abanindra Ghosh in BITS campus guiding Ravi during his bereavement. It was well-written and flushed out.
To say the least, I absolutely disliked Ravi's character depiction. Being a talented young lad who has faced past trauma and loss, the sissiness and timidity with which he was ill-conceived doesn't go well with me.
And the ending, a feel-good one, was more cinematic and less authentic to me, as the author left for the readers to assume where and how both Ravi and Geethu move forward in their lives, taking their own journey.
Overall, the writing as a whole with a contemporary modern-day relationship tangles as a solid plot was appreciable. However, the character development could have been better and made tighter with emotion as an undercurrent medium rather as an overpowering obstruction.
Looking forward to more and more such creations !

