Posts Tagged ‘medicine & surgery’

Karin Kahraman

June 30th, 2016

Here comes his wife Karin in the game, which suffers from the neurosis. More and more, you can see the scale now the disease, which brings not only muscle twitching with itself, but also a Kahraman and his family, as in the case of Andreas devastated houses, squandered money and absolute chaos. Karin must in a clinic, otherwise it’s not about slowly Andreas Kahraman, builds a new life together with his son. But the two are not alone: A wave of helpfulness rolls. The book is can break with most readers, because so absurd some places may also sound, the certainty that Andreas Kahraman and his son actually have experienced all of this is so sure.

The book loses at any point his power (and I’m not talking of a voltage, as she comes up in detective stories), although one wonders at the beginning, whether it be Maximilian and his history or the diseased Karin Kahraman. Who would like to learn more about the disease itself, should take another book to hand, but who is interested in seeing how this disease makes the life of many people, not only of those affected, on the head, which has with this Book exactly the right hit. The style of the book very reminiscent of a typewriter a diary, as well as the font, so it is not surprising that Kahraman wrote down his feelings and emotions. He manages to take the reader on a journey, where you encountered anger and fear, but also joy and relief and ourselves can feel partially. Partially, the rates seem somewhat choppy and in some places you don’t follow the literal speech, because this is not characterized by the typical characters. Still striking that typographical errors and Word duplication accumulate, starting at the point where the onset of illness is reported.

It is questionable whether the Publisher read the book, since these errors very obvious. In conversation with Mr Kahraman was it clear that the story of his family very moved him and so one can presume that he has written all of this under great mental pressure and was just too excited to express themselves correctly in some places. But what makes the book in my eyes again very likeable. Conclusion: Since the book is based on the reality and you can put in the story, it’s a win for everyone who reads it. “Especially relatives of sufferers know that they are not alone and hope can again draw on a normal” life. Absolutely recommended! Review by Alexandra Cook author: Kahraman, Andreas