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Old 03-27-2013, 02:09 AM   #2389
ShahAshrafAhmed
Shaheen Ashraf-Ahmed
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Join Date: Dec 2012
Device: Kindle
A Deconstructed Heart: Free contemporary fiction 3/27-3/31


"Beautiful story of life, love, loss and moving forward. I would highly recommend A Deconstructed Heart be put on anyone's must read list." eBook Review Gal.

"An existential triumph... Unabashedly, I can say I loved this book." Leila Smith, for The Kindle Book Review.

"Beautifully written story about loss, heartache and family." Amazon reviewer.



A Deconstructed Heart is free starting today and until 3/31.


4.9 out of 5 stars, 8 reviews on Amazon and at eBookReviewGal.com, BooksareCool.com and by The Kindle Book Review.






Get your copy here: http://www.amazon.com/A-Deconstructe.../dp/B009ZO1FVA

Synopsis:
Mirza is a middle-aged Indian college professor whose wife has left him. He moves out of his house into a tent in his back garden, where he sets up an outdoor classroom and serves tea to his kind but bewildered neighbors. He is visited by the irritable spirit of his long-dead teacher, Khan Sahib, who is befuddled by the dysfunctions of modern life.

In the north of England, Mirza's niece, Amal, is finishing up her last year of college before she is expected to join her parents in their new home in India. Asked by her father to talk her uncle back into his senses, she moves into Mirza's house, and they soon are connected by their shared loneliness. She meets Rehan, Mirza's student, and is intrigued by the path of certainty he has built over his own loss and loneliness--a certainty that is threatened by his growing feelings for her.

When Rehan disappears, Amal's suffering forces Mirza to face the world once more. Together, Mirza and Amal must come to a new understanding of what it means to be an immigrant family when the old traditions have unraveled.

A Deconstructed Heart is a novella that explores the breakdown and rebuilding in one immigrant family trying to adapt: how lines in families and cultures are forcibly redrawn, how empty space can be reframed by a tent into a new definition of home... but how, no matter how hard we may try to forget, the past refuses to be contained.
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