Book Review - Offsprings by Krishanu Banerjee

Offsprings by Krishanu Banerjee

complex, deep, and emotional

Genre:
So many emotions were expressed. One of the things I love about poetry is that it portrays so many feelings, and they're not necessarily examples of how to. I love seeing and relating to other people's raw emotions. Krishanu Banerjee manages to treat love without becoming sappy about it.
  • Genre: Poetry
  • Publisher: BookSquirrel
  • First Publication: 2019
  • Language: English

Book Summary: Offsprings by Krishanu Banerjee

The book ‘Offsprings’ is an English poetry book which consists of 70 different poems covering the themes of society, love, nature, death, grief, art etc. Each and every poems, excluding three poems, are rhythmic and different from each other. All poems(excluding one) are short in length which will make the readers enjoyable and doesn’t let them feel bore.

As this is a poetry book you cannot find typical characters in it but if you read it carefully then you can easily identify metaphorical characters in it like Nature, Love, Death, A flower, The setting sun etc.

Book Review: Offsprings by Krishanu Banerjee

Offsprings by Krishanu Banerjee was beautifully written and very descriptive poetry collection. I was amazed at how complex, deep, and emotional these poems got. Everyone is going to view poems differently because we have all been through different things in life but I think this book has something for everyone! Even the shorter ones with only a few words manage to show an intense amount of emotion.

You could taste the overflowing emotions, the pain, the happiness, the longing and love. The writing is simple yet raw and honest. It touches the heart and feeds the soul without having to use complicated and deep ways to make you feel something. Readers can easily connect with the words since what the poems convey is very relatable. Offsprings by Krishanu Banerjee is a feel-good book.

I could see an overarching story amidst the smaller stories in each poem. So many emotions were expressed. One of the things I love about poetry is that it portrays so many feelings, and they’re not necessarily examples of how to. I love seeing and relating to other people’s raw emotions. Krishanu Banerjee manages to treat love without becoming sappy about it. His poems, for the most part, are very short almost like song lyric clippings.

Just so that I can give a little glimpse into some of my favorite parts of this poetry book, I’d like to show you one of the very short poems that I liked:

Strings of My Guitar

Strings of my guitar
Is calling me,
Calling me to make tune again,
Again to create for self only
Only for my glory to regain.

It is telling me to forget the past.
Forgetting the past I should make,
I should make till the breath of my last,
My last great work sitting beside a lake.

Strings of my guitar
Is showing me the way,
Way to get the godly touch.
The touch can only give me away
The power of music, deeply to clutch.

More on this topic

Comments

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

  • Genre: Poetry
  • Publisher: BookSquirrel
  • First Publication: 2019
  • Language: English

Readers also enjoyed

Love in Plane Sight by Lauren Connolly

Love in Plane Sight by Lauren Connolly is an aviation-flavored enemies-to-lovers romance with a working-class heroine chasing her pilot dream. Here’s a spoiler-free review covering plot setup, character chemistry, themes, and whether it sticks the landing.

Dante by Sadie Kincaid

Dante by Sadie Kincaid review: a dark, spicy mafia romance with forced proximity, trauma recovery, twists, and content warnings. Worth the hype?

The East Wind by Alexandria Warwick

A detailed review of The East Wind by Alexandria Warwick—the Four Winds series finale. Explore Min and Eurus’s slow-burn romance, trauma-healing themes, mythic trials, mother-wound revelations, and what works (and doesn’t) in this emotionally intense romantasy.

The Kill Clause by Lisa Unger

The Kill Clause by Lisa Unger is a sharp Amazon Original Christmas thriller—an assassin, a child witness, and a conscience that refuses to stay buried.

The Once and Future Queen by Paula Lafferty

Read our in-depth review of Paula Lafferty’s The Once and Future Queen, a character-first Arthurian fantasy with time travel, a dismantled love triangle, thoughtful LGBTQ+ representation, ethically thorny memory magic, and a bold cliffhanger to launch The Lives of Guinevere series.

Popular stories

So many emotions were expressed. One of the things I love about poetry is that it portrays so many feelings, and they're not necessarily examples of how to. I love seeing and relating to other people's raw emotions. Krishanu Banerjee manages to treat love without becoming sappy about it.Offsprings by Krishanu Banerjee