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The alchemist

The Alchemist

The Alchemist is a fable about a shepherd boy (named Santiago but referred to as just "the boy" throughout the book) from the Andalusia area of Southern Spain. He lives a simple shepherd life, herding his sheep from place to place, finding them good food to eat and clean water to drink, and occasionally selling their fleece to fill his purse. He is simple and innocent and his needs are few, but he craves excitement and adventure, and he wants to travel and see the world. One day he meets an old god/king (the fabled King of Salem, Melchizedek) who promises to tell him where to find treasure, in exchange for one tenth of his flock of sheep. The boy, believing in omens, and that the omens are guiding him, gives the sheep to the old man.
Let me say one thing first. This is no grand, epic novel, littered with obscure adjectives. This is no Dickensian tale of lust, social commentary and wit, although it does contain elements of these properties. Conversely, it is an extremely simple story, charting one boy's progress  through life, and how he aspires to ever greater goals. But it is every bit           as effective, moving and poetic as any  novel one could care to name.
Indeed, the simple writing style, basic story, consisting of perhaps five significant characters, serve to underpin the morals and messages that are so strongly conveyed to the reader much more effectively then any more intricate structure could. Because in the end, this is a book with only one real message, follow your  heart and your dreams.
          We of the modern age pile far too much scorn upon such simple, idealistic ideas. But what this story brings out is a yearning for a better existence, a more magical and less  cynical one. Any book that can draw  such strong emotion is surely  a worthy one. Do not read this book expecting wonders of prose, although  Coelho's writing is beautifully poetic  at times, stark yet effective, "His hands  were abraded and exhausted, but he  listened to his heart. It had told him to dig where his tears fell".
          Perhaps  Coelho's greatest  achievement is how The Alchemist  truly does make you appreciate the  beauty of life, how the wonders here  on this Earth can equal the ones in  Coelho's short tale. After reading this,  it is much harder to take what we have  for  granted. I cannot commend this  story enough, and it is testament to  Coelho's writing skill that he can  make such a moving tale out of such  simple ingredients, and in such a short space. Sensational is the only word



      By
           Dileep Remanan
            Roll no:15

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