
Kismet
A Thriller
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Narrado por:
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Dilshad Vadsaria
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Kimberly Woods
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Rhett Samuel Price
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De:
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Amina Akhtar
From Amina Akhtar comes a viciously funny thriller about wellness - the smoothies, the secrets, and the deliciously deadly impulses.
Lifelong New Yorker Ronnie Khan never thought she’d leave Queens. She’s not an “aim high, dream big” person - until she meets socialite wellness guru Marley Dewhurst.
Marley isn’t just a visionary; she’s a revelation. Seduced by the fever dream of finding her best self, Ronnie makes for the desert mountains of Sedona, Arizona.
Healing yoga, transcendent hikes, epic juice cleanses...Ronnie consumes her new bougie existence like a fine wine. But is it, really? Or is this whole self-care business a little sour?
When the glam gurus around town start turning up gruesomely murdered, Ronnie has her answer: all is not well in wellness town. As Marley’s blind ambition veers into madness, Ronnie fears for her life.
©2022 Amina Akhtar (P)2022 Brilliance Publishing, Inc., all rights reserved.Listeners also enjoyed...




















Reseñas de la Crítica
“Much like the White Lotus in Thailand, Sedona, Ariz., has a reputation for spirituality that attracts all manner of gurus, yogis, and so-called wellness aficionados. Their pretensions are witheringly lampooned in this comic thriller about Ronnie, a Pakistani American who tags along to the desert enclave with her friend turned life coach, Marley. It isn’t long before the dark side of paradise reveals itself, in the form of a dead body—the first of many that soon turn up in various states of dismemberment. Akhtar has a keen eye for the hypocrisy of the namaste-espousing elite, and no vampire facial, jar of manuka honey, or hot yoga session is spared from her mordantly funny wit.”–The New York Times
“An amusing takedown of influencer culture.”—Kirkus Reviews
“Readers will be curious to see what this talented author does next.”—Publishers Weekly
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This isn't a book to be passed up!!!
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Just ok
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Surprize
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Great! then meh
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Could have been good
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Loved the story, the audio though…
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Was dreading finishing it but didn’t want to waste a credit
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I liked the ravens, but I like magical realism. If you don’t like that kind of thing, don’t read this.
Weird recording
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How do I I become a narrator?
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Others have called the narrator monotone; I didn't have a problem with that so much as the weird, random, long pauses. On more than one occasion I thought my audio had frozen. I've seen some reviewers complain about the writing, and I will admit that the sentence structure is sometimes clunky, but not so much that I couldn't enjoy the story.
As far as the story goes, this definitely isn't a campy beach read thriller. There are some weird, gothic elements, and this absolutely is a commentary on how white-dominated "wellness" culture appropriates Eastern spirituality and repackages it to sell at exorbitant prices, often back at the people the practices were stolen from (we have an early scene of the desi protagonist attempting to learn yoga from a white instructor with a BRITISH accent).
*potential spoilers below*
A lot of the negative reviewers seem to be upset about "anti-white racism." This book isnʻt anti-white. Itʻs anti-abuse. The protagonist is subjected to two forms of abuse: one familial, i.e. someone who is also Pakistani; the other cultural, i.e. wealthy whites exploiting Eastern cultural practices. The protagonist disavows her blood family (brown), to lay roots in her chosen community (white). The author shows us problematic elements of both cultures and how they have harmed the protagonist, but also shows us how the protagonist chooses to embrace aspects of both.
If you are triggered by scenes of interpersonal violence, you may want to proceed with caution. If youʻre someone who thinks calling out the white-dominated wellness industry translates as "all white people are bad," this is probably not for you. If you can handle both those things, and some weird supernatural elements, I highly recommend this. There was one major twist at the end that I did not see coming, and that almost never happens. Yes, thereʻs a LOT going on in this book, but I really do think the author pulls it off.
Read, Donʻt Listen!
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