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Subrat SaurabhAuthor of Kuch Woh PalMrigaanka Sharma is 16 years old. She has been an ardent book-lover since before she could read, listening to stories read aloud. She is a fantasy-fiction fan, a biology enthusiast, and a national-level debater, and enjoys music and travelling. Her passion for writing has stemmed from a love of story-telling and expression. She has been writing poetry since the age of eight and believes that words have the power to find people, change people, and move people. This is her first poetry book. Find her online: Website: mrigaanka.com | Instagram: @c.a.u.d.e.xRead More...
Mrigaanka Sharma is 16 years old. She has been an ardent book-lover since before she could read, listening to stories read aloud. She is a fantasy-fiction fan, a biology enthusiast, and a national-level debater, and enjoys music and travelling.
Her passion for writing has stemmed from a love of story-telling and expression. She has been writing poetry since the age of eight and believes that words have the power to find people, change people, and move people.
This is her first poetry book.
Find her online:
Website: mrigaanka.com | Instagram: @c.a.u.d.e.x
Read Less...Achievements
“I live like a vandal in the big city.
Everywhere I go, I break off small pieces of glass - furtively making sure nobody catches me at my selfish, strange act.
I take these pieces and write my poems - carefully assembled balls of glass that make visions in the light.
This is my glass ball legacy. No one will see it just the same.”
How many people do we have to meet, how many mistakes do we have to mak
“I live like a vandal in the big city.
Everywhere I go, I break off small pieces of glass - furtively making sure nobody catches me at my selfish, strange act.
I take these pieces and write my poems - carefully assembled balls of glass that make visions in the light.
This is my glass ball legacy. No one will see it just the same.”
How many people do we have to meet, how many mistakes do we have to make, how many times do we have to cry, before we become the people we are meant to be? How do we know who we’re meant to be?
Am I just an ongoing poem, or am I the epiphany at the end?
This book is a beginning. It is a collection of firsts: the life cycle of a caterpillar as it tries to become a butterfly. It is the time after the light leaves the stars and before it reaches our eyes. It is a question that decides to get up and find its own answer.
‘Light Time’ is a collection of poems about feeling, being and becoming. It is a search for truth, identity and happiness in the confusing haze of slowly growing up.
“This poem.
Maybe you will read it, and find some truth.
Tell me, won’t you?
Maybe it won’t be the truth of this poem, but since I’m writing it and I don’t know what it is, maybe there isn’t one.
Maybe you’ll find something.”
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