Book: A Year of
Wednesdays
Author: Sonia Bahl
Publisher:
Fingerprint Publishing
“Can one meeting change everything forever?
The Japanese have a term for it: Ichi-go ichi-e. One
Time, one encounter, lasts a lifetime.”
A Year of Wednesdays is based on this Japanese term. The
book opens with 2 people flying from Delhi to New York, two people who have
nothing in common, polar opposites, sitting in Seat 7A and 7B. On 7A we have a
cool Wall-Street guy, and on 7B is sitting a mom of two kids, who is happy that
the toddler is sleeping peacefully. Over the 15 hours of flight, these polar
opposites discuss their life with wit, debate and sarcastic comments. Cut to
New York, 7A invites 7B for a cup of expresso at the best coffee place in New
York, an invitation that 7B declines curtly.
And this is where the story begins. Over the course of one
year since this meeting, the conversations unfold. The story moves with each
Wednesday of the year, alternating with the life of seat 7A & 7B. Be it a
trading success party of 7A or a play at the son of 7B, both of them reflect
upon the conversation in the flight, affecting them and their life in some
manner. Starting off as polar opposites, over the course of the year, we see
that they are much more alike. With the life of 7A seeming perfect-perfect job,
perfect lifestyle, perfect fiancé, successful and 7B being a successful mom,
juggling a career as an environmentalist and a home maker, it is their
conversations that start affecting their decisions. When 7A suffers a terrible
loss, he starts taking those conversations a bit more seriously and we see a
sudden change in his life. We don’t see much change in the life of 7A, except
when she sees the news and rushes to the coffee shop that 7B had suggested and
her life takes a turn.
The book is wonderfully written and the alternating chapters
on the happenings in the life of the two protagonists is seamless. Sonia has
created the characters at the polar ends, hence relating with both of them at
times is but natural. The conversations are motivating at times and sometimes
funny to the core. They met only once but in their lives, they interacted
daily, in their heads but changing each other, bit by bit. The characters are
relateable and the storyline is crisp. It has humour as well as witty charm.
The ending of the story is truly unexpected and amazing. The
chapter is aptly named and written beautifully. The entire story gets
summarized in that chapter, that moment.
I would rate the book 4/5.
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