Skip to main content

Becoming: Now a Major Netflix Documentary REVIEW



 When you read a book, a good book, you get fully engrossed in the lives of the characters. It is like a short but powerful relationship that you have with them. When you pick up a memoir by Michelle Obama, there is a lot of expectation baggage at the beginning itself.


I am a fan of team Obama. I have seen all possible YouTube videos of them; speeches, campaign footage, interviews, dances, karaoke performances, dinners, street interactions; I follow them on social media and a couple of years back I read Dreams From My Father by Barack Obama which was quite insightful as well. Despite these impressions already formed, this book made me admire and respect them even more.

In her memoir, Michelle Obama talks about the experiences in her life that made her what she is. How she became.

While political experiences are obviously a part of her narration, she does not write about politics or advocate a side. Instead, she writes about values, people, reactions, thoughts. It is really a mesmerizing story about a remarkable woman. Her not-so-privileged childhood, her struggle to balance work and motherhood and her life as the First Lady. She writes about the achievements and failures in all aspects of her life. She talks about larger issues like discrimination as well as the supposedly little things like family and love which make a difference. Surprisingly, it is relatable.

The writing is eloquent, honest and simple. It feels intimate and warm. It is a story of a woman of character and strength.

Some might say that good PR will ensure that this is how she is projected. I say. Read the book for the writing, the inspiration that comes from it. It is a book that should be read by every generation to know that anything is possible. That you must own your story. That you matter.  AMZON BUY CLICK HERE
OVERALL 5 STARS 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Brief Answers to the Big Questions REVIEW

  A more descriptive title would be “Brief Discussions” for Hawking has few definite answers and the whole book is short – about 50 000 words, I estimate. The most interesting chapters for me were the purely scientific ones; on Black Holes and time travel. However, I was disappointed that, on page 93, Hawking explains the Uncertainty Principle incorrectly. He describes it as the impossibility of measuring the position of a particle (e.g. an electron) without disturbing its speed by shining a quantum of light on it. This is true but it is not the Uncertainty Principle which says that a sub-atomic particle does not have a precisely defined position and momentum (due to its wave-nature). As other reviewers have noted, there is quite a lot of repetition; the last two chapters could have usefully been edited into one. Hawking can sometimes be quite naïve, as when he suggest that Artificial Intelligence will help us eradicate poverty. If we had the collective will, we could have eliminated p

Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind REVIEW

This is the first of its kind book which I read and let me tell you, it captivated my attention in the tantalizing details from the very beginning, when it all started. The 5 stars I present to this book (I did have a little tinkling to settle for 4, at times, for somewhere in the middle, it got a boring. But then... It was not all about that). What I loved about the book: -I've really been looking for answers to many questions (about life, about evolution, about - why it happened this way and not that), things, and events (such a Britain, how it was able to rule over such big empires, etc.) I never understood. Having all it combined and presented in such a wonderful way was a treat to read. - Not only this book gives a history of how it all happened, it does open up many avenues and offers some logical reasoning about things and why they happened that way and not in any other way. The good part is, it does that in an exploring way and not just throwing some facts on your face to d