Did you find the novel's ultimate message to be at all optimistic or hopeful? Why or why not?
Created: 02/27/19
Replies: 18
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I don't think "optimistic" or "hopeful" describe the message. I'd say "perseverance" is the word that covers this story. These two women could have given up and been mentally and emotionally destroyed at any point, yet they found the inner strength to move forward. My heart broke for them yet I totally admired their will to overcome horrible conditions in their lives. Perhaps, if there's a sequel, it will provide optimism and hopefulness?
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I did not feel optimistic or hopeful after reading the novel. I think maybe there was some hope because if you are alive there is hope. Both women demonstrated such strength that together there is the possibility of a future. I would think much will depend on the character of Mohan, who had many issues of his own.
Join Date: 06/19/12
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I too saw a message encouraging perseverance more so than hope or optimism -- although I guess there is hope in perseverance; otherwise why bother. But on the whole I found the book to be quite a downer.
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If these characters were able to sustain their determination to finally reunite with one another—which they did, I’d consider it a triumph of hope over a despair that would have them become automans and part of the living dead. I found the book hopeful in the face of overwhelming odds, one can survive and still retain ones’ soul.
Join Date: 04/16/12
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As a reader, I remained hopeful for the girls. I can't say I expected a happy ending but I thought perhaps they would have experienced some sort of triumph that the reader would experience with them. I'm fine with open ended books but this one had just too many unanswered questions.
Join Date: 05/16/16
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I agree with many here that the message is one of perseverance. I do think ultimately it's better that both woman are in the US -- I hope that they can stay here. I hadn't thought about a sequel until I read some of these comments. I'm used to foreign language films ending with unresolved plots, so that thought didn't cross my mind.
Join Date: 02/06/17
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When I first read this question, like a lot of other commenters, I did not see hope or optimism as a message anywhere. But after thinking about it, I do think they are both there. After Poornima left her husband's house, she immediately began her search for Savitha. It never occurred to her that she would not find her. Only near the end of the book when asked "what happens if she is not there" by Mohan, did Poornima break down and admit she did not know. I think she didn't know because that wasn't a thought she ever considered. In her mind and heart and through her actions, she knew she would find her friend. Poornima's perseverance and resilience were driven by hope and optimism.
Sarap's comment is so powerful! Even when she was the most alone, as long as she had her piece of sari, Savitha knew she had the love and support of her friend. I believe that knowing drove her to run away again.
Both girls always ran forward-never back. That speaks of hope to me.
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I was left with a feeling of optimism when I finished the book. I felt there were possibilities - they had a chance at a life. They were connected on another level the moment they met and that connection is what motivated them to survive.
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I found the book's message to be hopeful. Regardless of circumstances, humans persevere and as long as there is life, there is hope. How much more brutal could these women's lives be? Rape, rejection, injury, drug abuse, physical mutilation, and slavery - is there any terrible thing left out of the story? Yet, Poornima and Savitha hoped for more, for different, for freedom and strove to attain it. They didn't just dream it and give up. The hope for better became a fire in their lives, a driving force in their actions. I believe the book, regardless of the traumas, was indeed optimistic and hopeful.
Join Date: 03/26/14
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I finished the book feeling hopeful for the girls because they were both so strong and resourceful. However I was not optimistic for the world. That women - fifty percent of the population - are treated and regarded so poorly and cruelly in 21st Century is something that we as human beings ought to be ashamed of. Because there are so many girls/women in various areas of the world where men assume ownership of them, who are not as strong and resourceful and will simply accept their miserable destiny.
Join Date: 07/16/13
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