🌿Book Review🌿
🌿Book Review🌿
Book:- The Hornbill Song
Author:-@srajanta
Where music remembers what people try to forget.
Ajanta Sinha Roy’s The Hornbill Song is a novel that quietly weaves love, memory, and identity into a story that feels both intimate and culturally expansive. Set against the misty hills of Nagaland and the emotional landscapes of its characters, the book explores how music—and sometimes silence—can carry the weight of history.
A love story that begins in the year 2000. Rick, a gifted Naga musician, and Priya, a Bengali classical singer, meet through their shared devotion to music. Their relationship grows naturally, almost like a melody building from a simple note. Yet Roy does not romanticize their union in a simplistic way.
Instead, she places it within the complex realities of Northeast India—cultural suspicion, inherited prejudice, and the unspoken tensions between the hills and the plains. The novel’s emotional strength comes from how gently but firmly it portrays these divides.
Roy’s writing style is reflective and atmospheric. The landscapes of Nagaland are not merely settings; they feel alive—wrapped in fog, tradition, and quiet resilience. The author clearly has affection for the region, and this affection shapes the narrative tone. Her descriptions of music are particularly evocative, suggesting how songs can become emotional archives for the people who create them.
The second narrative thread, set twenty years later, follows Pakhi, the daughter of Rick and Priya. Her return to Kohima introduces a sense of investigation and emotional reckoning. Pakhi is a thoughtful character, someone burdened by questions rather than dramatic impulses.
What makes The Hornbill Song compelling is its refusal to treat love as a simple solution. Roy acknowledges that affection alone cannot erase prejudice or heal old wounds overnight. Instead, the novel suggests that understanding—much like music—requires patience, listening, and courage.
The Hornbill Song is a thoughtful novel about belonging - belonging to a place, to a culture, and to one another. Ajanta Sinha Roy offers a story that resonates beyond its central romance, reminding readers that the echoes of love and loss often travel across generations.
In the end, the novel feels like the song it is named after : lingering, melancholic, and quietly hopeful.
Must read♥️♥️
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