🦋Book Review🦋
Unfold by Sukainah Fareed is a deeply introspective collection that gently bridges the personal and the universal. It is not a loud declaration of survival but a soft, steady whisper—a reminder that healing is rarely linear, and that strength often emerges in stillness.
Fareed’s poetry invites readers to inhabit emotional spaces that are often avoided: grief, uncertainty, and the fragile beauty of transformation. Her language is minimalist yet evocative, allowing silence to speak between the lines.
Each poem feels like a breath—measured, deliberate, and necessary. The cadence of her writing mirrors the rhythm of healing itself: slow, uneven, but undeniably forward-moving.
Fareed writes not from a place of resolution but from the midst of becoming. There’s no rush to “fix” the pain or force it into meaning; instead, the poems linger, allowing readers to experience the ebb and flow of human vulnerability.
The structure of the collection mirrors a journey through stages of healing—beginning in grief’s shadow, moving through reflection, and culminating in quiet empowerment.
Yet, even at its most hopeful, Fareed’s voice remains humble, never prescriptive. She does not offer answers; she offers companionship.
In essence, Unfold is more than a poetry book; it is an invitation to be present—with one’s pain, one’s progress, and one’s potential.
Sukainah Fareed has crafted a work that does not demand interpretation but rather participation. It asks the reader to meet themselves where they are—and, in doing so, to begin unfolding, too.
Must read♥️♥️
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