Review by Reitumetse_R -- The Spirit of Want
Posted: 26 Jul 2020, 09:43
[Following is a volunteer review of "The Spirit of Want" by William H. Coles.]
The Spirit of Want
The spirit of want by William H. Coles is a story of a woman, Lucy, who had a chance to have all the beautiful things as per most people: a family, good career, marriage, and a child. Rather, she chose to leave all that for an adventurous love and good sex she got from a church reverent.
She came from a well off family lead by a medical doctor. She was an adopted child and had a younger sister who was the family’s biological child. She, herself, was a practicing lawyer working in a good law firm and conveniently married to one of her father’s colleagues with whom she later had a daughter.
William H. Coles created a really beautiful story with a lot of relatable content and I couldn’t help but keep reading. He gave his main character everything that is normally longed for in life and then went on to make her choose the one thing that is mostly sacrifised in life, contentment. He put her contentment on one side, all supposedly good things on the other side and then made her choose. This created a roller coaster of emotions in me because I would hope for her to never have to choose between those but rather have one as a result of the presence of others. I found myself getting in her shoes and having a really difficult time.
I absolutely loved the book and I am already recommending it to everyone I know who loves reading. As a spiritually inspired person myself, I mostly enjoyed the parts that concentrated on the reverent and his missions. I loved the way they openly discussed spirituality, especially the conversations that included Lucy. I loved how she defied the “believing without questioning” stigma in spirituality. I, however, had a not-so-great time with parts that mostly concentrated on the medical aspects. William H. Coles went all out to give details of surgeries - in medical terminology. That did not resonate with me at all although I believe other people with even the slightest interest in medicine would enjoy.
The book is not just lovely but is also properly edited. I could only find two minor errors in the entire book. There also is zero level of profanity and no erotic scenes hence I recommend the book for just anybody who loves reading. I rate the book 4 out of 4 because I can not find anything I would want to remove from it.
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The Spirit of Want
View: on Bookshelves | on Amazon | on iTunes | on Smashwords
The Spirit of Want
The spirit of want by William H. Coles is a story of a woman, Lucy, who had a chance to have all the beautiful things as per most people: a family, good career, marriage, and a child. Rather, she chose to leave all that for an adventurous love and good sex she got from a church reverent.
She came from a well off family lead by a medical doctor. She was an adopted child and had a younger sister who was the family’s biological child. She, herself, was a practicing lawyer working in a good law firm and conveniently married to one of her father’s colleagues with whom she later had a daughter.
William H. Coles created a really beautiful story with a lot of relatable content and I couldn’t help but keep reading. He gave his main character everything that is normally longed for in life and then went on to make her choose the one thing that is mostly sacrifised in life, contentment. He put her contentment on one side, all supposedly good things on the other side and then made her choose. This created a roller coaster of emotions in me because I would hope for her to never have to choose between those but rather have one as a result of the presence of others. I found myself getting in her shoes and having a really difficult time.
I absolutely loved the book and I am already recommending it to everyone I know who loves reading. As a spiritually inspired person myself, I mostly enjoyed the parts that concentrated on the reverent and his missions. I loved the way they openly discussed spirituality, especially the conversations that included Lucy. I loved how she defied the “believing without questioning” stigma in spirituality. I, however, had a not-so-great time with parts that mostly concentrated on the medical aspects. William H. Coles went all out to give details of surgeries - in medical terminology. That did not resonate with me at all although I believe other people with even the slightest interest in medicine would enjoy.
The book is not just lovely but is also properly edited. I could only find two minor errors in the entire book. There also is zero level of profanity and no erotic scenes hence I recommend the book for just anybody who loves reading. I rate the book 4 out of 4 because I can not find anything I would want to remove from it.
******
The Spirit of Want
View: on Bookshelves | on Amazon | on iTunes | on Smashwords