Bamboo & Ancient Tree [Haiku]

a gnarled old tree -
set against a backdrop
of fanned bamboo

DAILY PHOTO: Midtown Skyline from Piedmont Park

Taken on November 13, 2021 in Atlanta

Red Leaf [Haiku]

a maple’s red leaves
shake and twist in the wind,
but hold tight… today

DAILY PHOTO: Silver Waters

Taken July 24, 2021 at Sharawati Reservoir

DAILY PHOTO: Garden and Colonnade, Almaty

DAILY PHOTO: Penna River

Taken on November 1, 2021 at Gandikota

BOOK REVIEW: Bliss by Sean Lewis

BlissBliss by Sean Lewis
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Amazon.in Page

This eight-issue graphic novel blends sci-fi and mythology to tell a story of the double-edged nature of memory – bringer of both bliss and trauma. At the story’s core is a father-son relationship in which both the father, Benton, and son, Perry, must come to grips with the fact that contained within the former is the greatest possible range of virtue and vice, a nearly irreconcilable mix of good and bad.

I enjoyed that the author instilled an intriguing strangeness to the book’s world using a mix of futurism, mythology, and creativity while at the same time dealing with primal human concerns. The book asks whether being free of memories can contribute to our being worse versions of ourselves (being able to forget misdeeds,) and whether healing (forgiveness of both self and others) can happen without memory.

I found this book to be provocative and well-composed. There were points at which it felt like the scale of deviation between the good and the bad Benton were unfathomably great. In other words, it felt like the motivation for his actions strained credulity. However, that encourages one to think about how a person might behave if he knew he could be freed of the memory of ill deeds.

I loved the story, the art, the world, and the characters. I’d highly recommend the book.


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DAILY PHOTO: Gooty Fort Overlook

Taken in October of 2021 at Gooty Fort