India has undertaken appreciable journey on the road of growth and development since the day of freedom, but Indian attitude or the attitude of inhuman kind needs to be changed very seriously, as Indians are very easily driven by emotions and not by practical thoughts. In his 4th publication Two States of My Marriage Life, Chetan Bhagat tries to restrict his scope from his expanded themes of Three Mistakes of My Life to concentrated social issues of marriage. The novelist narrates the story of a young man and a lady from two different states of India who fall in love and decide to get married but their parents do not agree because of cultural differences. The book covers their individual struggle to achieve goals, their strong attachment of love which wins them through all odds. A regular Chetan Bhagat reader may look for the development of Chetan Bhagat as a novelist but to the disappointment of the reader; Two States doesn’t promise anything surprisingly in the name of Realism as there is nothing new in the story and the way it is told has nothing but the typical style and language used by the novelist in his novels; with the exception of the length as this novel has a score or so more dense pages than the other
India has undertaken appreciable journey on the road of growth and development since the day of freedom, but Indian attitude or the attitude of inhuman kind needs to be changed very seriously, as Indians are very easily driven by emotions and not by practical thoughts. In his 4th publication Two States of My Marriage Life, Chetan Bhagat tries to restrict his scope from his expanded themes of Three Mistakes of My Life to concentrated social issues of marriage. The novelist narrates the story of a young man and a lady from two different states of India who fall in love and decide to get married but their parents do not agree because of cultural differences. The book covers their individual struggle to achieve goals, their strong attachment of love which wins them through all odds. A regular Chetan Bhagat reader may look for the development of Chetan Bhagat as a novelist but to the disappointment of the reader; Two States doesn’t promise anything surprisingly in the name of Realism as there is nothing new in the story and the way it is told has nothing but the typical style and language used by the novelist in his novels; with the exception of the length as this novel has a score or so more dense pages than the other