Blog Tour: Finding Juliet by Toffee


by
Toffee
Publisher: Srishti Publisher 



Blurb

Arjun is an incredibly nice guy who believes in true love and is waiting for it with open arms. He falls in love, not once or twice, but thrice. And every single time, happiness – like the girls he fell for – comes very close to him before pushing him away. His only pillar of strength in all his moments of grief and dejection is his childhood friend Anjali. Dejected by the games played by girls and fate, he leaves Hyderabad for Bangalore and ends up meeting Krish, an irresistible flirt. 

Krish understands Arjun's predicament, pacifies him with his words and enlightens him about the most complicated species ever created by God – Women. And then, Arjun's life changes forever. Will Arjun find the one he has been waiting for, or will he end up becoming a flirt? Will he ever taste lasting happiness? Join Arjun as he tries to figure out women and discovers the meaning of love, lust and life… all in his journey of Finding Juliet.


Read an excerpt here from Finding Juliet...

‘I have fucked you enough. Now you can fuck off!’ I said furiously, as I pushed her away from the bed.
‘You are such an asshole!’ she said, looking angrily at me as she stood up. Her cheeks were red with anger.
I saw her as she stood naked, with her hands on her hips. She was expecting me to say something, but I didn’t. It simply doubled her anger.
‘All you guys are the same. You want women only for sex,’ she stated furiously, pointing a finger at me.
I could have refuted her point easily and proved that she was being a hypocrite, given the fact that she had a boyfriend and yet she had slept with me a few moments ago. But I didn’t bother to respond and I just looked away from her. Disgusted, she let out a deep sigh and began picking up her undergarments, which were lying on the floor and started wearing them hurriedly. She moved towards the door where her black denims and purple tee were. She wore them in an instant and fished for her comb in her handbag. She brushed her hair and then wore the earrings I had removed before kissing her ears. She took some more time to get ready, gazing at herself in the mirror and adjusting everything, and I wondered how girls gave so much importance to their looks even during moments of distress.
Eventually, before leaving, she threw me a disgusting look and said, ‘I will never see your face again.’
‘Thank you. Now get lost,’ I said as she slammed the door shut.
After she left, I pondered over what had just happened and what had been happening in my life. ‘You shouldn’t have been so harsh on her’ – a soft voice from inside my heart said. But I strangulated it in an instant. I had lost enough in my life by listening to my heart.
Just a few moments ago, I was rolling in bed with Aditi, and after we came together, she began talking to me endlessly, like most girls do after sex. I was more interested in looking at the fan on the ceiling and wondering why it was spinning anticlockwise and not clockwise.
While talking, she had grazed her finger over my shoulder and moved it slowly towards my arms and said, ‘Behind these strong muscles, there is a weak heart, yearning to be loved and dying to be cared for. You can hide your pain from the world, Arjun, but not from me.’
That was when I had pushed her from my bed and I didn’t really understand why I had reacted so strongly. Was it because I had been hiding my true face from the world successfully all the while? No one had ever tapped the underlying guy inside me, except Krish. But when Aditi said those words, I became very defensive. The last thing I wanted was someone knowing about the void inside me.
I got up, splashed water on my face and looked at myself in the mirror. My eyes were crimson red. And even though I was nowhere near smiling, I saw an evil grin on my face. I splashed water once again and looked at myself. The grin grew wider and scarier. ‘How had I been and what have I become?’ I asked myself. I saw the image in the mirror once again. I couldn’t look at it and smashed the mirror with my hand. Pieces of glass got stuck on my knuckles. A big piece made a deep gash, but it didn’t hurt as much as the scars on my heart did.
I then riffled through the shelves to find weed – my temporary solution to permanent problems. I rolled a joint hastily and lighted it. After a few puffs, I felt feather-light and forgot everything that had been going on in my mind. Surreal images flashed in front of my eyes, and when I closed them, I saw myself waiting at the gates of heaven, even though I was, in fact, right in front of my bathroom door.
I tried to get in as I had to pee, but I tripped and fell on my face, my forehead hitting the tap find. The thud sound was what I remembered last, and I woke up to see myself lying on a hospital bed the next morning, with Anjali standing beside me.


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Amazon India

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About the author



Toffee is a simple guy who loves the complications of life. He used to write code by the day and books by the night earlier. But currently, he is busy writing assignments and chasing deadlines in his Master's in Business Analytics from the University of South Florida. Toffee loves narrating interesting stories with subtle insights. Through books, he wants to share beautiful stories, reach out to people and touch their hearts. Finding Juliet is his second book, written specially for India's Generation-Y.

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Schedule: FInding Juliet by Toffee


Your Name :Type of post :Date of Posting
TBC SpotlightSpotlight2/1/2017
SwarnalathaSpotlight2/1/2017
TBC Guest PostGuest Post2/2/2017
Inderpreet UppalSpotlight2/2/2017
TBC InterviewInterview2/3/2017
Reshma RanjanSpotlight2/3/2017
AparnaSpotlight2/4/2017
DevikaSpotlight2/5/2017
Jasleen KaurSpotlight2/6/2017
Sundari VenkatramanSpotlight2/7/2017
Nilima MohiteSpotlight2/7/2017
Deep DownerReview2/7/2017
Inderpreet UppalInterview2/7/2017
Esha ChakrabortySpotlight2/8/2017
ShaliniReview2/8/2017
Arnab ChaudhuriReview2/8/2017
Vandana SaxenaInterview2/8/2017
Jasleen KaurSpotlight2/9/2017
Nilima MohiteReview2/9/2017
SwarnalathaReview2/9/2017
Paromita GoswamiGuest Post2/9/2017
FloryieReview2/10/2017
Rubina RameshReview2/10/2017
Debjani BaidyarayReview2/10/2017
Vandana SaxenaGuest Post2/10/2017
Paulami Dutta GuptaReview2/11/2017
Sundari VenkatramanReview2/11/2017
Geeta NairGuest Post2/11/2017
Mahesh SowaniReview2/12/2017
Nikita JhanglaniReview2/12/2017
Surbhi SareenGuest Post2/12/2017
EnakshiReview2/13/2017
Dhivya Balaji / Readers MuseReview2/13/2017
Maria Perry MohanGuest Post2/13/2017

Blog Tour: A Walk in the Rain by Udai Yadla



A WALK IN THE RAIN
by 
Udai Yadla



Blurb

Love is elixir that keeps you alive. Love is poison that kills you. Unreciprocated love keeps you alive but kills every day.

Heartbroken Sunny lives a reclusive life, trapped in the past, living in his memories. He has no complaints about his life but refuses to embrace the present.

Saloni is a prostitute who is desperate to earn money by any means. She does not care about exploiting others to fulfill her purpose.

Fate unites the loner and the prostitute to embark on a life changing journey of retribution and self discovery.

Lovelorn Sunny turns misogynistic after Sandy, the only girl he loved walks away from his life, unannounced. He suffers painful solitude for almost two decades with the relentless haunting of her thoughts. A distressed friend Imran, vows to change his life forever. A surprise planned for his birthday turns into a tragedy that claims the life of his dear friend, triggering a series of unbelievable events. As Imran gets killed by a stranger, Sunny's calm life suddenly turns into a turbulent storm. With nothing left to live for, vengeance becomes his ultimate mission. His reluctant alliance with a prostitute to trace the killer sets him onto a nerve racking adventure of life and death.

Both are bound to a common goal with different motives but destiny has its own motive. A walk in the rain is an intricate tale of intense emotions, driven by hair raising twists and turns.

Read an excerpt from the book...

Surya woke up to the symphonic pattering of the incessant rain drops on his bedroom window panes. He dragged himself to the window in a hypnopompic daze and sat on a chair beside. He pushed opened the window and stared outside to witness the magic of the tender rain. It, actually, was a magical sight.
The tiny specks of rain slapping the leaves of the trees and the leaves swaying to the tune of the rain droplets
 The fresh sprouts of the fluorescent green leaves peeking out through the nodes of the branches
Chirping of the sparrows sheltered in their nests
The fragrant aroma of the rain permeating the cool breeze
And the cool breeze seeping in through the window, forcing him to fetal position, gently caressing him
It was magical indeed. The ringing of his phone at the table near him attempted to disturb his dreamy experience. He silenced it without even looking at it and continued to enjoy the blissful beauty of the pluvial charm. There was a mystic bond between the two. He sat at the window, silently staring at the rain as if he was deciphering a coded message. The ringing of his phone interrupted him again. He didn’t ignore the call this time. He shrugged in exasperation as he picked the phone. His frustration vanished when he knew who was calling. He smiled as he looked at the calling number.
“Hey Sunny boy… What took you so long?” screamed a voice at the other end, as he attended the call.
He had a close circle of very few friends, who call him Sunny. Others didn’t know his nickname. He maintained formal relationship with the rest from his old friends circle. He had to move away from the window to make the call as the sound of the rain was a disturbance to the caller. He had a short call with his friend, desperate to go back to his private conversation with the rain.
When he returned, he observed that the pattering of the rain drops had ceased its long and continuous endeavor. Sunny dropped his phone on the table and looked at the clock.
‘Damn it… The rain tricked me once again.” He was late to his office.
He rushed to the bathroom and finished his daily chores in record time. Skipping his breakfast, which had almost become a habit for him, he wore a pant and shirt, carelessly picked from his modest wardrobe. He didn’t even look at the mirror to check how he looked. He didn’t care.
As he rushed out snatching his bag from the shelf, he made an abrupt stop at the window. He stared at the droplets clinging on the window pane as he slowly walked up to the window. He then connected the droplets form the word ‘SANDY’ on the pane and his lips curved into a smile on his bushy bearded face without his knowledge, which he noticed in the reflection on the window pane.


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Amazon.in | Amazon.com 
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Amazon.ca

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About the author




Udai Yadla is a passionate author and poet. Mechanical engineer by education, Software engineer by profession, Writer by passion. Owing to his job, he travelled to various cities, socializing with people of different cultures. He cultivated interest in learning more about people, which perhaps enticed him into the study of human psychology. His interest in psychology is evident in his writings. His first book 'A walk in the rain' is widely appreciated equally by critics and peers. He has been nominated for Forbes India Celebrity 100 List. He is the most sought after author among young breed of authors. He is currently working on his next novel, which is a psychological thriller.

You can stalk him @

              

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Schedule: A Walk In the Rain by Udai Yalda


Your Name :Type of post :Schedule Date
Jasleen Kaur Spotlight 1/27/2017
Nilima MohiteSpotlight1/28/2017
NiharikaSpotlight1/29/2017
Sundari VenkatramanSpotlight1/30/2017
Inderpreet UppalSpotlight1/31/2017
Reshma RanjanSpotlight2/1/2017
DevikaSpotlight2/2/2017
Banaja PrakashiniReview2/2/2017
Nikita JhanglaniReview2/2/2017
NiharikaReview2/2/2017
Shilpi ChaklanobisGuest Post2/2/2017
Chittajit MitraSpotlight2/3/2017
aparnaReview2/3/2017
Devansh DesaiReview2/3/2017
Inderpreet UppalReview2/3/2017
Paromita GoswamiGuest Post2/3/2017
SwarnalathaSpotlight2/4/2017
Surbhi SareenReview2/4/2017
vasraoReview2/4/2017
SwarnalathaReview2/4/2017
vickySpotlight2/5/2017
AnksReview2/5/2017
Debjani BaidyarayReview2/5/2017
Paulami Dutta GuptaReview2/5/2017
Paulami Dutta GuptaSpotlight2/6/2017
Shalini RReview2/6/2017
Mahesh SowaniReview2/6/2017
SwarnalathaReview2/6/2017
SwarnalathaSpotlight2/7/2017
Kruti ShahReview2/7/2017
Arnab ChaudhuriReview2/7/2017
Geeta NairReview2/7/2017
Ruchira KhannaSpotlight2/8/2017
FloryieReview2/8/2017
Nilima MohiteReview2/8/2017
NiharikaInterview2/8/2017
Geeta NairSpotlight2/9/2017
Devansh DesaiReview2/9/2017
Jasleen Kaur Review2/9/2017
Maria Perry MohanGuest Post2/9/2017
 
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