Saturday, June 16, 2012

P.S. I Love You.

A best seller in Irish book stands, 'P.S.I Love You', Cecilia Ahern's first book, made for easy week long reading. 

Essentially the story of a widow living through the first year of sorrow and grief, it becomes something more than that, when Holly starts receiving envelopes her husband has addressed to her every month for the year.

That is the twist in the tale that keeps one going through the pages, in anticipation of the hero's loving rejuvenation of his grieving wife's life. It is to see the heroine emerge from her sadness, ready to accept that life has to go on. It is also about hope and the power of the human mind to adapt to and accept terrible losses that one can face in life.

The story is about getting over loss and pain, learning to live your life by accepting distressing changes, finding that life just doesn't end when someone close to you dies and getting back to the realities of life with the support of loved ones. A good story, unusual story line and a close peek into the physical and mental trauma of a woman who loses her husband and a man who lovingly resurrects his wife's life after his death - all the necessary drama, albeit a little surfeit,  is there to make you go through the pages.  

The book wasn't exactly addictive; at some point, it even became predictable; too soapy and sentimental in print, the book nevertheless helped me pass time in a vague emotional bond. 

I could not but help recall the movie based on this - Hillary Swank and Gerard Butler, bringing to life the two characters in a way that the book didn't. 

The tighter narration of the story, coupled with some breath taking  chemistry between the two actors and the visual brilliance of the Irish landscape made the movie more memorable than the book. I mean, if I'd read the book first, I might've forgotten about it in a week or two - but the movie, who can forget, Butler prancing around doing a stripper act and Swank, drowning in the sorrow of the memories so fully and tearfully with so much genuineness...Sometimes, movies make classics of books. This is one. 

©Chitra Lakshimi 2012. All Rights Reserved.


Image courtesy : Amazon.com




6 comments:

Gautam said...

I couldn't agree with you more over the "movie being more memorable than the book" ma'am. I always vote for the novel hands down but P.S I love you was quite an exception. Scintillating! :)

Anonymous said...

For me, P.S. I love you is one one of those rare books, where I liked the movie better than the book, just like you said. I did cry buckets while reading the book. And it touched me in a very inexplicable way(In my defense, I was 20 when I read it!) but the movie was something else! Maybe because Gerard Butler was soooooooo easy on the eyes ;)

You should come here sometime Ma'am. This country IS oh so beautiful, just like what you saw in the movie. Would love to take you around! :)

-
Your meek, docile student(from Cluny) now living in Ireland ;)

Chitra Lakshimi said...

Revathy, the great barrier reef has always been my dream spot, but somehow after Santhosh visited Dublin for a two month project and described the charm of the place and the people, I've added Ireland to my list of'mustvisit places' .

And, since when were you the meek, docile child? Schizophrenic tendencies any ? Ha...ha...ha.

Chitra Lakshimi said...

Gautam, I didn't know reading was one of your numerous sins. Yes, the movie was so well made. A director alone can see the potential in a book for a good movie, I think.

Sindy Radha said...

It's been quite a while since I read the book - and in fact "PS I love you" is probably my least favourite Ahern book. But love her way of weaving the whimsical with the mundane and coming up with stuff that pulls at your heart strings, no matter how predictable...
And you hit the bulls eye - like Stephen Kings "Green mile", this was another case where I enjoyed the movie much more (as it had cut out a lot of the tripe) and of course Gerard Butler didn't hurt either....Thanks for the review - it helped me remember a book I'd almost forgotten about...(try her "Time of your life" - I enjoyed that one quite a bit)

Chitra Lakshimi said...

Spot on, Sindhura.

Love the way you verbalise your thoughts.