Kalau harap plot dramatik cepat berkembang, memang boleh terasa macam tak ke mana pada awalnya. Dua watak utama, Sevgil dan Shihab, adalah pelajar Malaysia di bumi Mesir. Mereka datang dari latar belakang dan cara fikir yang berbeza. Penulis banyak ambil masa membina watak, suasana, falsafah, dan idealisme.
Konflik mula kelihatan apabila ayah Shihab meninggal dunia dan dia pulang ke tanah air. Sevgil hilang arah, pelajarannya terganggu dan tenggelam dalam kemurungan. Kepada Marsha, Harris dan Syed tempat dia berkongsi rasa. Walau pun peribadi sahabatnya itu dipandang sinis masyarakat sekitar tapi di sinilah erti persahabatan diuji. Aku sendiri tersentak ketika Sevgil mendedahkan pengalaman buruk di asrama yang meninggalkan trauma mendalam. Babak ini membuka mata, menjelaskan mengapa dirinya begitu rapuh, dan di situlah aku rasa Sevgil adalah mangsa pengkhianatan.
Babak bersama Dr. Noha, psikiatri yang merawat Sevgil, muncul sebagai salah satu adegan paling signifikan. Dialog dan interaksi di sini bukan sekadar terapi, tetapi juga menjawab persoalan mengapa Sevgil menjadi dirinya yang penuh dengan kerentanan. Di sinilah karya ini menampilkan sisi keberanian, menyentuh isu kesihatan mental.
Dan akhirnya, pertemuan Sevgil dengan Seth di Gunung Sinai benar-benar menyentuh hati. Ia hadir sebagai alegori penuh makna, menyempurnakan perjalanan panjang Sevgil. Endingnya tuntas menutup naratif dengan begitu baik. Secara keseluruhan, Cinta Terbelah di Laut Merah bukan sekadar kisah cinta dua insan. Ia sarat dengan renungan tentang dunia, politik, sejarah, pencarian makna hidup, dan yang paling penting, hubungan manusia dengan Tuhan.
Kisah-kisah sendu dan pendapat tentang buku yang sengaja dikongsikan untuk memeriahkan suasana sendiri. 🦋
Cinta Terbelah di Laut Merah by Ilham Mazalan
Petaka Bakteria by Mohd Kasim Mahmud
The Cut by Richard Armitage
The story begins in the quiet village of Baron Mallet, where a group of so-called friends, Annabel Maddock, Ben Knot, David Patel, Chris and Lynette Davis, Catherine Maddock, and Mark Cherry, spent their youth together. But behind the facade of friendship lay cruelty. Mark was the constant target of their bullying, and no one ever stood up for him.
Then tragedy struck. Annabel was found dead at the abandoned mill. The investigation dragged on for nearly a year, but the truth was never fully uncovered. David Patel was convicted. Annie’s blood on his clothes sealed his fate. Yet the murder weapon was never found.
Thirty years later, “The Mill Killer” is finally released on parole. At the same time, a Hollywood director arrives in Baron Mallet to film The Cut, a movie meant to dig into the town’s buried secrets. But this isn’t just another horror flick. Instead of cheap scares, the film reimagines the tropes of the eighties slasher, turning them into something far more unsettling and layered. And someone behind the production seems to know exactly what happened all those years ago.
The past refuses to stay buried. Ben, who once dated Annabel, now finds his career, his family, and his secrets under threat as the cameras roll. Revenge, guilt, and the scars of bullying intertwine in a story that blurs the line between fiction and reality.
The Cut is not a neat revenge tale, it’s messier. At times the pacing drags, but the novel lingers because it reminds us of a chilling truth: bullies don’t change. They thrive on arrogance and power, not conscience. The only way to stop them is to stand up, say no, and refuse to let them define you.
Emma On Fire by James Patterson & Emily Raymond
I started Emma on Fire with completely the wrong impression of what I was about to read. While I’ve never read any of James Patterson’s YA collaborations before, I was curious and somehow, despite my mixed feelings, I finished it.
Emma Blake, seventeen, is the model student at Ridgemont Academy, straight-A grades and community leadership. But behind the privilege lies deep tragedy. Her mother died when she was young, and the grief she once shared with her sister, Claire, became even heavier after Claire’s sudden death, an apparent suicide after years of therapy and instability.
With a distant father who prefers to throw money at problems rather than talk, Emma’s grief becomes tangled with anger, blame, and the need to be acknowledged. Then comes a shocking twist, she pledges to self-immolate in protest of the state of the world. Her recorded confession goes viral, drawing national attention and unsettling everyone around her.
Emma’s voice in the novel is intense, though at times repetitive, and her motivations remain partially in shadow, an unresolved thread that left me questioning what truly drove her. This isn’t the straightforward YA drama I expected. It’s darker, heavier, and raises difficult questions about grief, protest, and how far someone will go to be heard.