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Sunday 24 March 2024

Book Review of I Want to Die but I Want to Eat Tteokbokki by Baek Se-hee

 In her therapy memoir, author Baek Se-hee makes no pretense or exaggeration. She hopes to share her conversations with her therapist in a vulnerable account of what it means to know yourself better. Kritika Narula reviews the book that overcame her skepticism of therapy memoirs. 


Book Review originally written for IndigoBlue Magazine, which has ceased publication.


Book Review I want to die but I want to eat tteokbokki




“What’s it like being in therapy?” More often than not, when people ask this question, they are looking for a story in the answer. They are looking for a narrative.  Something that makes for a good story, with a breakthrough moment that takes the limelight. In reality, however, therapeutic settings are hardly dramatic. 


I have been in and out of psychotherapy for over 5 years now. And my only point of reference for what therapy was supposed to be like was a few pop culture depictions here and there. Grey’s Anatomy brought in a psychologist when the characters lived through a deadly mass shooting. There was the highly problematic Dr. Reisman in Big Little Lies. Realistic portrayals of therapy were hard to come by in mainstream pop culture until a few years ago. 


So, when a therapy memoir went viral, I felt just slightly uncomfortable. Often, therapy can seem like a nebulous concept to explain. For people who have been in therapy for a while, it is hard to imagine the blank canvas they started with, now that they have verbalized so many of their previously unacknowledged emotions. For those just starting out, the blank canvas means they don’t really know what to expect from the process. 


And how your healing process unfolds can look different for each person, but it is rarely a big climax or dramatic moment of change. You may have an ‘aha’ moment, but that’s just the beginning of a healing journey where you have more information about yourself. The realizations, the changes, and the epiphanies grow slowly in the space you and your therapist create. You use the therapy space as a microcosm for the world, where you practice embracing all your emotions. So, I didn’t want to read another account of the therapy experience that favored the dramatics. 


The title of Baek Se-hee’s book particularly intrigued me, though. The tteokbokki reference reminded me of all the times I have wanted to give up on a goal, but still had an external point of reference that I wanted to stay for. In an email to The Sunday Times, Baek shares, “I was thinking of planning my own death, but I got hungry and ate tteokbokki. I felt guilty thinking that I could still eat tteokbokki when I wanted to die, yet it felt like such a natural thing to do.” 


And this is a good glimpse into the rest of the book. To my delight, it didn’t dramatize or exaggerate. Just like the tteokbokki reference, it made me chortle at times. As someone who finds her sorrow definition-defying, it also made me feel seen and heard.

We all have emotions

Baek opens the story of her therapy experience with an earnest question, “Why are we so bad at being honest about our feelings? Is it because we’re so exhausted from living that we don’t have time to share them?” As anyone stepping into a therapist’s office will tell you, the first realization in therapy, for many people, is about the validity of our emotions.


We stop thinking of our emotions as a natural response only when they are either dismissed, invalidated, or belittled at some point in our lives. And the initial sessions often force us to unlearn this tendency. Just like Baek, we learn that all emotions carry information about us. They are opportunities to learn more about ourselves. Later in the book, Baek focuses on her self-esteem, diving deeper into what makes or breaks it. It is one of the gifts of therapy — it gives you the permission to explore what makes you who you are.

Lingering sadness

If I had to point out one reason this book merits a place in your reading list, it is because of the context. What made Baek seek therapy wasn’t a life-altering event or a sudden loss, but rather a mundane genre of sadness, something she defines as a “rotting on the inside, where the rot is this vague state of being not fine and not devastated at the same time.”


We all go in and out of funk in tandem with life’s ups and downs. But some people embrace the lows a little too closely. Her experience of lingering sadness resonates with me. She describes how she accepted that she was a little sadder than everyone else from a young age. She also shared the tense, restrictive circumstances at her home and in her family. 


She remarks, “I let my world grow darker and darker,” and the honesty in this conversation shines through. Therapy spaces let you share your feelings and thoughts without sugarcoating anything. It doesn’t have to sound appetizing. It is not supposed to be edited. Once again, your sessions help you practice being authentic in the real world.


It takes a lot of courage to admit something like this: “To me, sadness is the path of least resistance, the most familiar and close-at-hand emotion I have. A habit that has encrusted itself into me everyday.” It takes far more courage to be curious about this complicated feeling. 

An honest glimpse into the healing process

Baek’s account is a reminder of how imperfect the healing process can be. Previously, therapists have talked about the imperfection of the process in Maybe You Should Talk to Someone (by Lori Gottlieb) and in Why Has Nobody Told Me This Before (by Dr Julie Smith). But to hear the client’s perspective was refreshing. What people don’t often tell you about therapy is how much of the healing work takes place in the outside world. Therapy equips us with the tools needed to live authentically, and we then step out into the world with those tools to build that authentic life. Therapy is also an extremely exhausting process. As Baek shares candidly, therapy reflections bring our contrariness to the surface, “That human beings are three-dimensional is perhaps my favourite thing to say. But it is also likely the last thing I will remember in a bad moment.”


The author writes prefacing the novel, “I doubt I could ever again be as candid in a book as I was in this one.” And when you sit through this simple but meticulous account of her conversations with her therapist, you understand why. 



SAMHSA’s National Helpline is a free, confidential, 24/7, 365-day-a-year treatment referral and information service (in English and Spanish) for individuals and families facing mental and/or substance use disorders. Call 1-800-662-HELP (4357).


Follow me on:

Instagram: @kritika.narula

Goodreads: Kritika Narula

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The Storygraph: Kritika Narula

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Book Review: Understanding “Why We Sleep” to Sleep Better

Book Review of Why We Sleep originally written for IndigoBlue Magazine in 2021.

In his book Why We Sleep, Matthew Walker dives deep into the science behind sleep. Many useful insights and cultural connections to sleep are revealed. Is it worth a read? Let's see.

As we understand the science behind our wellbeing — and especially, sleep — the phrase, “I’ll sleep when I’m dead” seems ever more convincingly unpropitious. In a culture where pulling all-nighters sounds like “a badge of honour” or “a sacrifice made for urgent work,” the idea that rest and sleep actually serve a rich litany of functions can seem revolting. It is anything but.


Why We Sleep by Matthew Walker Book Review



Sleep has caught our attention

An increasing number of people — researchers, counselors, journalists — are looking at our broken relationship with sleep. A plethora of recent books has been written, such as Dangerously Sleepy: Overworked Americans and the Cult of Manly Wakefulness by Alan Derickson, At Day's Close by A. Roger Ekirch, The Secret Life of Sleep by Kat Duff, The Slumbering Masses by Matthew Wolf-Meyer, and The Sleep Revolution by Arianna Huffington. The narrative on sleep that this literature explores is undergirded by a simple idea — that we have undermined the importance of sleep for far too long, and that the dismissal of sleep has been to the detriment of humanity. 


This cultural obsession with overwork and our delusion that a sleep-be-damned approach is a prerequisite to success have resulted in conventionally successful people who are, self-admittedly, sleep-walking through life. When success is defined by such robotic standards, our sleeping time is the first victim of our scheduling hubris. In order to remedy the situation, we first need to understand how and why our sleeping time is as important as waking hours. And science can make the most compelling arguments here. 


Understanding the science behind sleep in Why We Sleep

In his book Why We Sleep, professor of neuroscience and psychology and the director of UC Berkeley’s Center for Human Sleep Science, Matthew Walker, digs deeper into "The New Science of Sleep and Dreams." He explains, supported by research-based evidence, how neglecting sleep can impact our creativity, problem-solving, memory, physical health, relationship with food, mental wellbeing, immunity, life span, and so on. 


Where sleep deprivation is glamorised and celebrated, Walker presents the workings of our body — specifically, our sleep cycles — to shock us into realising the havoc we have been wreaking on our bodies through disturbed sleep patterns. For example, Walker draws attention to our go-to deadline hack, the all-nighter. While we may pride ourselves on our ability to deliver a gigantic workload within a few hours by staying awake all night, we lose out on physical vigor and sharp brain function the following day.


In her 2016 book The Sleep Revolution, Huffington touched upon the idea that “properly appraised, our sleeping time is as valuable a commodity as the time we are awake — in fact, getting the right amount of sleep enhances the quality of every minute we spend with our eyes open.” Now Walker provides a scientific basis for these arguments, sharing how each stage of sleep — light NREM sleep, deep NREM sleep, and REM sleep — offer different brain benefits at different times of the night. 


How can we repair our relationship with sleep? Why We Sleep offers advice

Understanding why sleep is so critical to our wellbeing and survival should act as a wake-up call for us to repair our sleep cycles. In Why We Sleep, there are many nuggets of information that can help us in this journey. 


Did you know that our circadian rhythm and the sleep pressure signal of adenosine work together to ensure that we sleep in a timely fashion? And that the caffeine that our Instagrammable lives have made so aesthetically pleasing actually tampers with these? Or that the drugs prescribed for inducing or controlling sleep have horror stories of their own? Add to that our ubiquitous technology. Our bedrooms, the sacred shrines where we sleep, are littered with beeping, vibrating, flashing screens. All of this is bound to impair our sleep and Why We Sleep brings scientific nuance to this conversation.


Conclusion: Don't underestimate sleep

What we conclude is this: Sleep has a lot of enemies — cultural, capitalistic, and structural. Yet, there’s no shortcut to robust sleep hygiene other than through a good night’s sleep. You have to commit to sleeping when your body gets ready to sleep, not assisted by drugs, but perhaps environments that aid sleep — soft music, electronics-free bed, a nap to punctuate the day, and setting a sleep routine.


Monday 17 September 2018

A list of all my favorite Bojack Horseman Season 5 Think Pieces



There are very rare shows that actually want to make you do more about, than just watch. Bojack Horseman, the Netflix animated series about a talking horse, has had its fair share of evolution over the past 5 seasons.
The fifth and most recent season was released just last week but fans have already binged it. Now there are facebook groups with long discussion threads, reddit fora, twitter threads and major media websites with Think Pieces about
- the entirety of the season
- the eulogy episode
- the show's handling of a problematic character
- much more

So I am compiling here a list of all the think pieces that I read and liked. (in no particular order)





While we are at it, I wrote one for UnBumf too: Bojack Horseman Season 5: You Say You Want To Get Better, But You Do Not Know How

I have also added the full text of the eulogy on highlights on my instagram

Tuesday 7 August 2018

13 Reasons Why...I Am Saying Goodbye



During the humid Delhi summers of 2013, fresh out of school, 'bibliophile' was enough of an adjective and a title to define my personality. Yep, my entire personality- because whoever I was, whatever I knew was owing to (and also limited to) what I read. This included books, newspapers, magazines and textbooks. SO MANY TEXTBOOKS. I was THAT kid in school. In retrospect, I now realise that entering college I was thoroughly taken aback by how much flexibility and scope there was for me to try something I never had. The clichéd narrative of transformation of a nerd into a spunky character seems absurd, but clichés exist for a reason: it isn't always larger than life as is often portrayed in popular media, but gradual- so sneaky at times that you barely even notice. You realise it when you bump into an old classmate from high school and find yourself completely detached from the life you were living 4 years ago, and from the person you were 4 years ago. SO I guess what I am trying to say is: over the course of the last 5 years, I changed. I still love reading a lot, but adulthood has been a tricky terrain so far.  

While I was always a nerd as far as I can remember, it wasn't until I was 12 that I found the goldmine of leisure reading. So yes, I missed out on the Enid Blyton and Nancy Drew and PG Wodehouse and Harry Potter phases of the younger life (even though I like to believe I have compensated now as an adult) and dived straight into Charles Dickens. Not sure why, but I think having a spelling competition ahead of me made me lean into these choices. It is no coincidence then, that my if-I-use-big-words-I-will-make-my-point-effectively phase was around the same time.

I had a Robin Sharma phase too- I read around 6 of his books and my belief in self-help literature was annoyingly high. Today, I still cherish reading The Monk Who Sold His Ferrari, and Who Will Cry When You Die, but I also takes whatever jokes are made at their expense with loads of laughter.

When I started the blog, it was to learn web publishing and such, and more importantly, I was so thrilled by the idea of this book bloggers community! I was getting in touch with authors directly, interviewing them and getting to know them a little better- it was a great ride, but this amusement park is now shut.


1. Now that I look back, a hidden motivation for me to have this blog had always been having something to talk about. Cut me some slack here: I was trying to fit in where it felt like I belong- there were so many pop culture references thrown around, and for someone who had not watched a single sitcom, or been a fan of a single band, books were the best icebreaker. Anyone talking about movies would bring me a great segue for the whole movie-book adaptation controversy.

2. During these 5 years, so much changed. Personally, what changed was that a lot of my education now came not from books- but from experiences and people. Hate to admit it, but I even enjoy people's company …sometimes. Fun fact: When I first joined facebook, it was a reluctant step and to avoid being discovered my name was Kritika Bibliophile (which explains the URL https://www.facebook.com/kritikabibliophile) so that was a great talking point too

3. What also changed was the world around me. When I started the blog, #bookstagram didn't exist. It was a fairly different community with obscure for a and such. With the obscurity depleting, its charm for me did too.

4. Another pivotal world change: it feels like there was a phase of bombardment of self-publishing and indie publishers, and my review requests were always full and I was apologising all the time for posting the reviews later than decided.

5. This is pretty lame: I had told my self I will stop once I cross 1lakh page views. I liked the number game, I cannot defend myself here. But then I got Spoon University and DU Beat to look at the numbers of,  and once again, the charm of my own blog faded.

6. I have often felt like that kid in the attic, and books have been there to rescue me. So: Don't get me wrong; books are still my saviour in more ways than I can imagine, but when you're told in therapy to take a long hard look at things you are doing that no longer bring you happiness, blogging came up.

7. Reading Harry Potter as an adult put a lot of things in perspective and one of my takeaways from the whole experience was that I don't HAVE to do anything. Like Hermione, I haven't given up on books- never make the mistake of assuming that- I have only learnt more of the world beyond those books and a lesson or two in survival.

8. Emails. When I started blogging as a naïve school student, I didn't have to think about emails as a drudgery. In fact, I was trying to understand the email etiquette. Now, having managed some 11 email IDs, I have to say I am done.

9. This is the worst part: I come across a post I remember writing after hours of painstaking references to the dictionary, but reading the articles now, I do nothing but cringe. The only way I remember 2013 is that I thought using big words will embellish my review.

10. The blog has been my longest commitment ever. (In addition to a few friendships that make me swell with pride-  because sure, longevity may be overrated, but longevity with the right people is a heaven you don't have to die for) I digress. The blog has been my longest commitment but not a proud one. I am completing 2 years in a job this month that I am in fact very proud of- so I will let that take the limelight now.

11. Leisure reading (is that what you kids call it?) has been such a delight. Being able to read a book without mentally commenting on the prose, style, information, characters is so pleasing.

12. There's been a lesson in humility: I don't like a book doesn't mean it is bad. I refrain from dumping on a book because the more I see and understand the world, the more I realise how unqualified I am to comment on an author's work- I can only tell what the reading experience was for me, but I can never critic it in the real sense of the word.

13. To be honest, a huge reason this is happening is because I had a burnout last year. Life. And then there's a tonne of academic reading to be done each day. I got myself a library card and now there's no limit and it is all so overwhelming and so I just don't have time to deliver quality and a goodbye is always better than a compromise.


But over the years, I have had the immense pleasure of getting to know so many bibliophiles and authors and other SO SO IMPORTANT people working in the publishing industry, I am owning up to it and getting back to books- my lovers.

Happy that before going away, I got to see this wee feature at BBD, so perfectly described *heart eyes*



PS: So I think I'm shutting this blog down now…help me pick the best reason.

PPS: it was a home run folks. I'm glad we did this. :)

Book Review: Sam's Theory by Sarah Mendivel


Title/Author Name: Sam's Theory/Sarah Mendivel

Genre: YA Fiction

Release Date: Jan 8th, 2018

Publisher: CreateSpace

Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Sams-Theory-Sarah-Mendivel/dp/1977568505 ,

GoodReads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/37642889-sam-s-theory

Author Website: https://www.sarahmendivel.com/

37642889

Description/Blurb: 

After a final act of horrendous abuse threatens her life, fifteen-year-old Sam runs away from home and into the Olympic Mountains of Washington State. Physically and emotionally exhausted, she happens upon a mysterious tree house in the woods which shelters an old woman named Theory. Through elements of magic and sage advice, Theory takes Sam on an unforgettable healing journey. Sam begins to discover that she, too, has powers. But her process is interrupted by the nervous reality that her abusers will soon go after her younger sister, Nova, unless she can get to her first.

With the help of Sam’s friend, Dodger, and two other spirited kids from foster care, the group sets up a hidden camp in the wilderness and forms “The Orphan’s Collective.” While struggling to create their own concept of “family,” Dodger and Sam also work to navigate their budding feelings for one another. As the group formulates a plan to reach the masses of kids left behind by adults who never wanted them, they naturally begin to rewrite the fate that has seemingly already been decided for them.

Sam’s Theory is a story of immeasurable grit and re-empowerment after trauma. With embedded real-world advice, it is the recognition of our tremendous capacity as human beings to withstand darkness and summon resiliency, simply by learning how to use our voices and reconnect with those around us.

My Review:

"It's okay, Sam. I think we're safe now, I told myself."

Right from the beginning, the tone for the book is set: there's a lot that's made up, but you can read the metaphors. The metaphors have a function to perform: they make the story easy for you.
Yet, I have to admit it wasn't the smoothest of reads: you might not, for example, finish it one sitting. It also takes it some time for the plot to grow on you enough so that you don't leave it unfinished, but if you keep at it, the story is a strong one.

The theme that the novel deals with a sensitive ones, trauma and its aftermath is basically a time of more questions than answers, which is why it becomes hard to obtain clarity. You want to read a book, now the sub-plots. At the most, you want the mystery to be solvable. But unlike your cliched detective mysteries, the injuries we are dealing with are hard to identify. So it only makes sense that identifying the plot turns and anticipating them is tricky too.

If you go by the face value, the plot is very fictional, very absurd: Sam meets a woman names Theory. Our protagonist has suffered abuse of all kinds, and is now on a rescue mission of sorts to save her sister from the atrocity. There are many other layers to the plot as well: and all get unravelled in due time.

But if I were to point out that one thing that I loved he most about the novel, it has to be the subtle inclusion of positive messages in favour of mental health and support. Consider these:

 "Asking for help doesn't make you weak; it makes you an army."
"We are all made up of the same ingredients, you see, which is ultimately what creates a shared human experience"
"Remember that a trait is neutral until we give it power. When we give it power, we can either use the trait to become a superhero, a common person, or a villain." 

The protagonist is also my favourite character, perhaps because we walk with her through the plot, and feel the vulnerability of her thoughts. Not to mention, she is also a relatable person as far as coping mechanisms go:
"The presence of books soothes me and were often my secret escape from the violent alternative at home." 
Or when she talks about how she tried to fit in,
"Flaunting my repertoire of reads would have likely torn the cool card I barely held onto right out of my hand."
So I believe the question to ask is: what colour were you eyes when you were at chapter 1 versus the last? Or was it reflecting light from being too moist?

Wednesday 30 May 2018

Book Review: Secret Box: Searching for Dad in a Century of Self by Tony Page

The Book:

The true story of a psychologist who takes off his professional hat and returns to his ‘60s childhood. His quest is to solve the mystery of what happened to his father and his family. Guided by diaries, letters, photographs, visits and family recollections, he finds out what made him a psychologist in the first place.
File Size: 525 KB
Print Length: 258 pages
Page Numbers Source ISBN: 1999960718
Publisher: Telling Stories Press (February 11, 2018)
Publication Date: February 11, 2018

I thank the author for providing me a 
Reviewer's Copy in exchange for an honest review!





My Review:


I don't think I have ever read a book that handles the issues of digging the past so realistically.
The story, very simply, follows the second-hand reconstruction of a man's life (and of those around him) in a quest for answers and explanations. If you are a product of the silent generation, you will know what this means. I can faintly recall this scene from my favorite TV show New Girl,
Jess: Families talk about things.
Schmidt: No. Families ignore things until they go away.

This is what makes the story and the book in entirety so different, but also a highly risky narrative: we cannot know someone's story for sure, and in my hyperbolic opinion, we cannot even know our own story completely ever. But as the book mentions too: the act of storytelling is curative and therapeutic. Closures are sought by all of us and they are highly underrated. Or in the words of the author, 'Silence denies us understanding while truth lets us live and breathe.'

I know there are things I would like to lash out at my family for- and I am only 22! So looking at the narrator's journey of weaving together these remnants seems painfully realistic, and raw.

My favorite bits were two. One was the fact that the story wold often pause: to take a look back at the ethical quandaries involved- sometimes within the process that our protagonist/narrator was pursuing, sometimes on the actual incidents being talked about:
‘As a writer you permit no privacy to the dead: if they leave diaries you have to read them and in this we are utterly unsentimental. To be a writer means to tell the truth you need to tell’.

The other favorite bit was the psychological tangent it took: and kept, realistically. For example, it doesn't exaggerate it as a moment of epiphany for the whole family just to make it a great, fun plot. It just states the truth: The truth that often the passage of time creates an unease for you, but the others may not feel it with the same intensity of unease, or even, at all. So the rest of the family isn't presented to be as bothered, or restless by the turn of events.

A lot of research shows, and often concepts have been explained from an informed perspective which is reassuring, but also the jargon seems unnecessary in the larger scheme of things.

In a way, this book to me is the written adaptation of the movie Dil Dhadakne Do, and my review for both stays the same: a long-awaited look at the aftermath of living in dysfunctional families and semi-functional individuals, scarred and marred by what the rest of the world offered them- with the story stretched just a bit more than the reader wants to stay for, before losing it.

‘Don’t make it a box of secrets, as people did in the old days, because untold stories are poisonous, and as soon as a story is told, the healing begins’.



Find the book here:



Wednesday 25 April 2018

Book Review: A Quick & Easy Guide to They/Them Pronouns by Archie Bongiovanni; Tristan Jimerson

The Book:

Archie, a snarky genderqueer artist, is tired of people not understanding gender neutral pronouns. Tristan, a cisgender dude, is looking for an easy way to introduce gender neutral pronouns to his increasingly diverse workplace. The longtime best friends team up in this short and fun comic guide that explains what pronouns are, why they matter, and how to use them. They also include what to do if you make a mistake, and some tips-and-tricks for those who identify outside of the binary to keep themselves safe in this binary-centric world. A quick and easy resource for people who use they/them pronouns, and people who want to learn more!

Paperback, 64 pages
Expected publication: June 12th 2018 by Limerence Press
I thank Netgalley for providing me the 
Advanced Reader's Cope in exchange for an honest review!




My Review:

Always love a balanced, teaching-without-preaching graphic book!

 "This book exists to educate and inform people on gender neutral pronouns--specifically they/them*--so that you don’t have to do all the heavy lifting yourself. We want to keep this book short and affordable, so you can give it to friends, family, co-workers, or random people on the street.Also, if education fails and folks are being jerks, you can just throw this book in their face."It’s the future, we don’t have time for that nonsense.

"...ignore your personal experience to fit into my own worldview...This is how | feel every time |’m purposely misgendered."

I have been trying to explore books that talk about gender-neutrality and gender-fluidity in a very elementary, rudimentary manner-  so this one comes as a great recommendation for that.
As a cisgender, I have wondered myself how awkward and uncomfortable conversations about one's gender identity could be, and how tricky it is to use words, and to try and use them in the right manner- I have imagined the best of intentions go to waste because of the uncertainty of 'what should I say that it doesn't offend them' or 'how should I say this without sounding mean'. If anything, I have to thank this book to address this issue. Not just by giving healthy ways of going about these apprehensive conversations, but also addressing how these can get awkward- but change is awkward and uncomfortable and if we are to be advocates for inclusion, we have to be companions in this discomfort.

At its core, the book is a practical argument in basic human decency- the fact that we need to respect other people, their choices and preferences. And that respecting differences is not to be equated with questioning your own choices. The entire idea is to have inclusive safe space - it is going to take much more unlearning of the flawed conditioning we received since childhood- but it is worth the effort to let everyone breathe in peace.

I like the fact that even when the book uses humour, it doesn't try to be sarcastic- it is rather the plain, good ol' humour and I believe that is how such issues need to be discussed (Honestly, sarcasm can often backfire in fragile situations like these!)



Find the book here:




Thursday 25 January 2018

Book Blast - The Immortality Trigger by Douglas Misquita




~ The Immortality Trigger by Douglas Misquita ~


a Luc Fortesque adventure thriller










1945 


Allied paratroopers raid a secret Nazi research facility. The operation is reported as a success. But, the lone survivor, Benjamin Ezra, knows otherwise. 





2014 


A drug lord, El Fantasma threatens to plunge Colombia into an era of bloody drug wars. DEA Country Attaché, Zachary Mason is in charge of a covert operation to remove El Fantasma, with the help of a vigilante, El Angel, and a retired undercover agent, Raymond Garrett. 



In Naples, INTERPOL agent, Sabina Wytchoff, is investigating the death of her parents, when the Wytchoff family’s association with an ancient cabal comes under investigation. 





After the events of The Apocalypse Trigger, Luc Fortesque, is scouring the world for the man who tested experimental drugs on him. 



Wei Ling works for a shadow Transhumanist faction within China’s State Council, developing drugs that will enhance human longevity. 





Their paths will converge… violently… and conclude the mission that began in 1945.











The Immortality
Trigger is also available at all leading eBook retailers






Reviews for The Immortality Trigger:





"...with a
storyteller of Misquita’s caliber, you just may need Dramamine before the first
chapter is done."
- Bestthrillers.com




"For fans of the
fast-paced and modern tale with global reach that dabbles in history, this is a
perfect storm."
- Lydia Peever













"The Immortality Trigger cemented in my mind why
Douglas Misquita is my favourite Indian thriller author."
- Newton Lewis







Other books in the series:


         















Douglas Misquita is an action-adventure thriller writer from Mumbai, India. He hammered out his first novel on the keyboard of a laptop with half-a-working-screen, and has been churning out literary entertainment to the tune of a book-a-year. His books have been praised for their pace, locales, intertwined plots, research and visuals - it’s almost like watching a movie… only, this one unfolds across the pages of a book! 





















Giveaway:
One Paperback Copy of The Immortality Trigger by Douglas Misquita





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