Showing posts with label dinah jefferies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dinah jefferies. Show all posts

13 December 2014

Author Q&A Session #10: With Dinah Jefferies



In an another new session of Author Q&A, I present you the best-selling author who inpires her readers with her heart-touching as well as gripping story about history, tragedy, loss and love. Yes, my freinds, we have today Dinah Jefferies, the best-selling author of the book called, "The Separation", to talk about past, present and beyond the horizon of life. So, scroll down to learn more about Dinah who bares her soul to let us see that what a wonderful, inspiring human being she is and always have been!  

Read the review of The Separation

17 October 2014

Review #2: The Separation by Dinah Jefferies





My rating: 5 of 5 stars


Malayan Emergency, the year is 1955, which is when the Malayan guerrilla war was being fought for an Anti-British government in Malaya. The period of Insurgency has occurred just after the Japanese troops left the country followed by Malayan economic disruption. The war is at its full form, and the red-headed Europeans were treated with disrespect.

A woman named Lydia Cartwright who found herself searching for her two young daughters amidst of deadly war and terrorism, murder, lies, and deceit. A wild goose chase for a ray of hope in the Malayan jungles, Lydia's life had never had been so terrorising and so on the edge. A mother's painful journey of searching her daughters among pain and bloodshed and uncovering so many hidden puzzle pieces , mysteries and secrets, in the way letting her guard down for more than one time.

The Separation by Dinah Jefferies is an enriching and soul-touching story that is bound to be etched on to your hearts for a very long time.

Synopsis:
On the opening scene of the book, we see that Emma is playing with her younger sister, Fleur on their Malayan country home and then all of a sudden, their dad, Alec is asking them to pack off all their belongings hastily and all the while, Emma was asking what about their mother, Lydia, will she come with them, how will she know that they have left the house, worrying badly about her. When Lydia returns to the empty house, she meets Maznan, a young half-Chinese boy, who has to be rescued to be taken back into the jungle to his mother. And thus Lydia embarks upon a journey to save another mother's child and of her own daughters. From terrorist attacks to ambush to getting lost in a deep dark jungle which leads to uncertainty, how much pain can a mother take for the sake of her own daughters?