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156 pages

First published April 22, 2020

6 people want to read

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3 books

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Njkinny (Njkinny's Blog).
758 reviews187 followers
May 29, 2020
https://www.njkinnysblog.com/2020/05/...

Just Another Complicated Story by M.K. Aarnik is his debut novel that takes the readers to Salem to an educated, working class family. Vimal lives with his Professor father and elder sister. Due for an interview in Chennai, he boards a bus and it is here that he meets his school-time friend. This chance meeting sets in motion a journey down memory lane that has the readers following Vimal to his high-school days and the series of events that landed him to his present situation.

When I read the blurb, I didn’t get the full impact of the power of this story that had me totally captivated and engaged from start to finish. M.K. Aarnik’s narration is fluid and vivid. I loved his simple style of storytelling that had me feeling like I was watching a techni-colour movie and could easily visualize every scene and connected with the characters and events.

The parental, societal as well as school’s pressure of Board exams on the students, the social injustice and hypocrisy evident in the marriage scenario, the unnecessary violence perpetrated by people with criminal inclinations with no regard for innocent lives as well as the power of true friendship, familial support and self-motivation are a few of the key highlights of this book.

Having experienced all the school drama showcased in this book, I easily connected with and felt like I was re-visiting my own school days. I enjoyed the expertly shown contrast between the types of friends we all have encountered in school – a studious and loyal friend like Raju, and a troublemaker and disinterested in studies friend like Tarun.

The author easily tackles first love woes, personal tragedies, downfalls, relationship disillusionment and finding strength from unexpected quarters. I got teary-eyed, angry, hurt and then inspired by this story.

The strength of this story lies in subtly but effectively touching on serious topics like terrorism, civil wars, social and familial pressure on youth, teenage suicides and the power of gratitude to make lives better.

Apart from a few minor grammatical errors, I could not find fault in this endearing young-adult and coming-of-age story that touched my heart and won me over.

The poems included in the story are so heartfelt and beautifully showcase the author’s writing prowess.

I was left wanting more and I hope I get to read more about Vimal, Deepa, Pascal, Tarun, Raju and the others in another story.

A splendid debut novel that is a must-read for all YA fans as well as people wanting to re-live their school days, Njkinny recommends Just Another Complicated Story by M.K. Aanik to people looking to chill with a personal experience style book that leaves you feeling light, happy and inspired. 5 out of 5 super shiny stars to it. This is definitely one of the better reads of 2020 and one of “Njkinny’s Favourites” this year. Go read this book now!

M.K. Aarnik is a promising new author who I recommend and whose books I will be checking out in the future.
2 reviews
August 7, 2020
PLOT: 4/5
CHARACTERS: 4.5/5
WRITING STYLE: 3/5
CLIMAX: 4/5

Overview

“Just Another Complicated Story” by M.K. Aarnik was not just simply another complicated story for me. It was special for so many reasons.

Chiefly because it gives you a very intimate insight into the mind of the Indian middle class.

Let me warn you, it is not a fresh story. There are no groundbreaking revelations. It is not a story that will have you questioning the society or life or the world as to why it is the way it is.

It is the normal, everyday, regular life of a tenth grad student, Vimal and his journey to 12th grade wondering if he would ever make it to a good college? Well, Would he?

I leave this to you to read and find out. After all, It is…. Just another complicated story.

In A Gist

For me, what stood out in “Just Another Complicated Story” is the ease with which the author has tackled some serious Indian issues, not just lightly brushing past their layers but hinting the root causes in a very simple and easy way.

The story deals as equally with the pressure from an Indian middle-class family to get good grades and get into a ‘Top-Ranked’ college as it does with the agony of broken friendships and hours spent studying without yielding results.

But it does not restrict itself to that.

It is also about fearing the wrath of the father and thriving and blooming in the love you get from the perennial shade of your mother’s sarees and sister’s covers for you.

The story covers teenage love, frustration, confusion, friends, tiffs and a hope that every teenager has… that one day, they will be understood by someone.

The brilliance of Aarnik’s writing reaches its epoch when you realise that he talks about everything that is wrong with the Indian education system, Indian parenting and society and still manages not to lose the pure and innocent voice of his protagonist who is a teenager stuck in the drama of life.

Characterisation

What amazed me about MK Aarnik was he did not caricaturise any character of the story.

Even in a story as short as this, there is a place for every kind of person, the studious Raju, the carefree Tarun, the sincere Pascal, the strict DHM.

For someone who has come across a lot of bad Indian Writing, this surely was a ray of hope. It was honest and raw and I can vouch for it because I too am a sister to one such Vimal.

For Whom?

“Just Another Complicated Story” is a must-read for the parents of teenagers who want their children to get in the race of being engineers and earn lakh rupees packages in five years.

This book is a must-read for the siblings of engineering students or those who aspire to be.

This book is a must-read for everyone who wants a better picture of our education system and for those students who are on the verge of giving up and taking some drastic steps.

The book seems to say: Hang in there, buddy! This is not the worst thing in life.

Emotion[less]

The only thing that baffles me is if Aarnik deliberately took out emotions from all the scenes and replaced them with actions symbolising how emotions are just not talked about in Indian families or because he thought that a teenage boy with class, tuitions and everything else going on would not dwell on them or was it simply a structural flaw.

There are so many instances where the atmosphere is emotionally charged but Aarnik does not use them to their full potential.

As a reader, the emotional side of the final tragedy that happened demanded more depth and width.

The book forces you to think: Would talking about your feelings have helped?

On whatever spectrum your answer may be, “Just Another Complicated Story” jerks you awake and forces you to think.

Structure

The plot is linear and simple enough. The characters are everyday people.

The story has been told time and again but Aarnik does a good job at re-telling a story that is known yet keeps the reader hooked till the very last words.

A bit of strict and insightful copyediting would have improved the flow of the story, made the overall nitty-gritty better but as a whole, it is a fascinating read.

It is a thoughtful story written by an Indian writer for an Indian audience that deals with Indian themes. And when it comes to Indian literature, there is nothing more M.K. Aarnik had to do to prove his expertise.

A Personal Touch

As I sit and talk about the book with my brother whose story is similar to Vimal, his first reaction is he would not like to live through the trauma again.

But on being prodded, if he would have read it when he was facing the ordeal, he looks away pensively and says yes in a soft tone.

Yes, it would have been better to know that there was someone out there suffering like I was and maybe life wouldn’t have looked so bleak then.

The brother and the sister keep talking. The reviewer closes the pen and looks at the book that has finally initiated a conversation that should have happened long ago.

“Just Another Complicated Story”… a book as beautiful as its cover.
Profile Image for Arvind Srinivasan.
337 reviews18 followers
May 16, 2020
A refreshing light read, that will remind fond memories of your school days and terrified memories of the public exam year. After quite some time I read a book where the story concentrates on school going boy and since the boy was in my generation I could connect a lot. That made the book kind of living experience over 'just a read'.

The plot was not complicated, but author has made it interesting in quite intelligent way reveling very less initially to sustain the suspense. Mostly one can complete the book in one sitting as it is page turner, but would recommend not to do since that way you will not cherish a lot that the book can offer.

Personal difficulties and mind set during that period was well explained. Going into mind of teenager, trying to understand him, how he values people who give independence to him and value / sees those who tries cultivate discipline is something that is not easy to convey, the author has succeded to do that well in many places. One can see different facets of people and self thorough vimal. And obvious some will feel villain some will feel hero, it is more situational and the importance that you give to that person is a feeling that I got while reading / thinking on the book.

The book was racy in certain places and bit slow in certain places, but the slow parts helped in making the racy parts understandable. When the book was going realistic, catching the bus by going and stopping in front, person sitting next seat is the person whom you hate, vimal able to see his girl friend while she does not and rain sequence on terrace were kind of cinematic which I felt could have been ignored / toned down a bit.

If you have been reading heavy books off late, then this book can help you chill out. If you are a person who likes to read light personal experience book then this book is for you. Go fo it.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews