" We should Learn Empathy from the very core of Human Emotions! And Violet Evergarden is one of those series that serves as a medium to it. " - Saptarshi Bhowmick And like I said before I am one of those strangers who really liked it when the shows make me cry most; it evokes certain emotions in me that I might have never felt before. Violet Evergarden is among those few series that recapitulated all the epitomes of civilized empathy. let's summarize shortly the plot of the series~ Plot - The story revolves around Auto Memory Dolls: people initially employed by a scientist named Dr. Orland to assist his blind wife Mollie in writing her novels, and later hired by other people who needed their services. In the present time, the term refers to the industry of writing for others. The story follows Violet Evergarden's journey of reintegrating back into society after the war is over and her search for her life's purpose now that she is no longer a ...
August came like the Rain in my life and washed away the continuity I was enjoying. So, leaving the stream, I decided to do a different blog than my regular ones that will not be about animations and stuff. This time I made my mind for expressing gradually by layers of explanations of a book I read and wondered about recently - "All the Light We Cannot See" by Anthony Doer. After careful consideration of all its aspects, I write down this post. So have a good read. It is a review and also analysis, so expect spoilers. I encourage you to read the book beforehand and then read this blog further. This book features these two kids, two teenagers during World War II. One is a girl who is blind - her name is Marie-Laure Leblanc and then a boy named Werner Pfennig who is German. The story goes back and forth between their lives. There is another story, a German officer (Reinhold von Rumpel) looking for a diamond. He is one of those Nazis tasked with acquiring all the valuables aroun...