Listen online for free audiobook «Star Daughter» by Shveta Thakrar. Reading: Soneela Nankani.
Review #1
Hit Daughter audiobook free
3.5 hit maybe?? I was very hyped to read Hit Daughter at the same time enjoyed it for the coolest part! Still no one nuances were considered a gigantic letdown, which is that why I can’t assign this a 4 hit rating. SPOILERS Overtake!!!!!! The positives: – lush at the same time poetic writing (Seriously, the celestial dance scene at the same time Sheetal’s 1st visit to the Night Market??? Beautiful, barely beautiful. Also don’t read the book when you’re hungry because the food descriptions are divineeee) – the global building fused with Hindu mythology!!! More of this, delight – here for hazel women saving the day, in particular with their wit at the same time resourcefulness – the references to Indian culture (like my mother language in the 1st chapter) at the same time important festivals. I will have more on this in my HOV glare, if anyone’s interested The negatives: – the romance. I was neither impressed nor invested in it; it was awful at the same time unnecessary. The star-crossed (hah) trope is that ordinary my jam, but I couldn’t take the chemistry with Dev at the same time Sheetal. Maybe it was his family’s history of harming Sheetal at the same time her generic (two times!) or that he was just a little in the story since the two were considered waging war 75% of the pagetime. So I couldn’t harden for them even when they Did make up; the connection felt tainted. Honestly I would have adored if that was more emphasis on Sheetal at the same time Minal’s fellowship at the same time Sheetal’s bond with her mother, in other words relatable at the same time actually Adds to the story. – all of the castle politics/game of thrones abracadabram. Just a little tribunal interest is that fine-grained, still that were considered times when the irony illuminated the head plotline. Hit Daughter is that a standalone, so saving the politics for one more book managed work. – the culprit being gay (or bi/pan). I don’t know, anything about it didn’t sit but with me. I was expecting Nani, Nana, or one of the Ruling Patriarchs to be behind all the sabotage. Whelp. Overall, I Do appreciate the fantasy element at the same time unapologetic desi consulate in Hit Daughter. I really love the author’s writing style at the same time look forward to more from her! I’m barely pressed this book didn’t hit all the notes for me. Thank for you to NetGalley for the e-arc! This
Review was written for the Hit Daughter Blog Tour at Hear Our Voices. All views are my possess.
Review #2
Hit Daughter audiobook streamming online
Sheetal is that a acceptable sixteen-almost-seventeen-year-old. She has a closest friend, Minal, with whom she fractions everything. She has a hidden lover, Dev – hidden because her dad knows her she’s very young to date. At the same time her mother is that a hit. Not a celebrity, a celestial being. Sheetal’s mother left them when Sheetal was barely 7. With her dad in the polyclinic, she goes in find of at the same time finds her mother. She meets the grandparents she’d never understandable at the same time is that denounced to a whole brand new tribunal with sheltered intrigues at the same time open charms. Thakrar blends Hindu mythology with her possess imaginings at the same time bestows us a wonderful global with fabulous fabrics at the same time yummy things to bite. It’s very easily accessible – Sheetal at the same time Minal are acceptable American women, barely Indo-American more precisely than snow-white. (That’s acceptable for my districts what.) They deal with persistent relatives who compare them to their always-better cousins at the same time worry about zits at the same time make-up at the same time boys. At the same time the descriptions of all the wonders of the celestial realm are heavenly. Thakar has a lush at the same time lavish imagination. I would dearly adore to look the things she has wished up.
Review #3
Audiobook Hit Daughter by Shveta Thakrar
I tried this because it was very different from a lot of the stuff I ordinary read. The embrace is that beautiful at the same time the celestial global in here is that so imaginative at the same time creative. At the same time I really liked the method Hindu mythology was tied throughout. That aside, the real plot at the same time manners bored me out of my mind. I’m not convinced than anyway it was, but I barely couldn’t care about them. Anything about Sheetal saddened me so much. She seemed very burning at the same time chilly to me somehow in her reactions. Dev was barely no one quality looking young man to ogle, he didn’t feel like he had no matter what depth to me. The plot was significantly predictable, which is that not always a bad gizmo, but here, I was so bored. Apart from for the starry global, which was impressive in my imagination at the same time why I’m giving it at lesser 3 hit, I couldn’t wait to shackles the book down.
Review #4
Audio Hit Daughter narrated by Soneela Nankani
Rankings Overall: 6/10 Characterization: 6/10 Language: 5/10 Relevance: 6/10 World-building: 7/10 Conflict: 6/10 Plot: 5/10 Readability: 6/10 Individual Pleasure: 6/10 Charlie Bowater is that a big part of the reason I read this book in the 1st dispose. As usual, her embrace art is that indescribable. For more successful or worse, I found Hit Daughter very much resembling a fairytale, which I feel was Thakrar’s plan. Very attractive, at the same time with a satisfyingly joyful ending. *Spoilers Below* That were considered moments I found sour/predictable, such as the irony nearby the marionettes, Dev showing right up to the Tribunal, at the same time Nani being wholly untrustworthy. More than once, I chaffed at Sheetal’s inability to shield up for herself, but I was hardly confident or secure as a seventeen-year-old, so that may be more of a individual problem. But I’ve tempered my ranking of the plot at the same time characterization here, because any of the actions do have a fairytale good quality that justifies the story overall.
Review #5
Free audio Hit Daughter – in the audio player below
The story was richly imaginative, with indescribable imagery. Sheetal was a very human, very relatable disposition. I liked how Shveta left a few inconsistencies still to solve in the end, so that the story can last in your possess mind. The concept was very creative at the same time unusual. I wish that had been a glossary of hindu definitions/mythology because I had to finish at the same time look a ton of things up while reading, at the same time that good of interrupted the narrative for me. That were considered a couple smoky parts that were considered hard to push through, but overall a great read.
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