I wish I could read this book all over again for the first time, Easy to read you can say, a beginner friendly hindi book , yet so not easy to go through the pain. I looooveee the characters , More powers to the mothers like Shalu and everyone of them bcz sabki apni apni kahani hein, maa bhi ek ladki thii.
Storyline: So basically story is about Raghav's mother Shalu, but initially story starts with Raghav Awasthi winning the scholarship to go to Stanford for his degree in Data Science, but just a couple of months before his departure, his mother Shaalu got hospitalised due to stress-related issues and stuff. Raghav and his girlfriend Nisha decides that Shaalu might be better off if she gets remarried. Thus begins their plan of finding a new husband for Shaalu. Now add to the complication Shaalu has a secret from past that no one knew about, until Nisha stumbles across things she wasn't supposed to, but what went after?! Love, betrayal, pain everything is there. This is written in a dual timeline.
There are books that entertain you, and then there are books that remind you to pause and feel and think , Ibnebatuti is one of those rare reads that makes you look beyond the surface.
For me, this book isn’t just a story; it’s a mirror. It reminds us that it’s never okay to judge someone just by what we see from the outside. Everyone carries a world of their own scars, dreams, regrets, and memories that we may never understand until we listen.
While reading ibnebatuti, I found myself constantly thinking of my mother — her life, her choices, the things she said that I now hear differently. I revisited her stories through the pages of this book, and it made me realize how little we often know about the lives that shaped the people who raised us.
The ending stayed with me long after I closed the book. Especially that last question — it wasn’t just tough, it was hauntingly beautiful. It forced me to look inward, to ask myself what love truly means. I don't know yet the answer for me , thanks to the author for differently asking the questions.
And here’s what I believe, even after everything I’ve faced: love is love. It finds its way back, always — to those who know how to love, how to forgive, and how to feel deeply.
To the mothers who were once teenagers with dreams.
To the daughters and sons who are now beginning to understand them.
And to everyone who still believes in the power of love and second chances.
A solid ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ from me.
Read this book. Feel it. Let it make you softer.