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Sameer Gudhate Presents the Book Review of Found in Silence by Shiksha Sheoran

  • Writer: Sameer Gudhate
    Sameer Gudhate
  • 23 minutes ago
  • 4 min read

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There are books you flip through in the backseat of a cab and forget by the next traffic signal, and then there are books that stay with you like a late-night walk through empty city streets — quiet, steady, and strangely comforting. Found in Silence by Shiksha Sheoran is very much the latter. I opened it expecting just another reflective read, but what I found was something more intimate — like catching your own reflection in a shop window at midnight, or a stranger’s kind smile on the metro. A mirror, a whisper, a hand on your shoulder saying, I know what you’re carrying, I’ve carried it too.

 

Shiksha Sheoran is just 21. Let that sink in. At an age when most of us are still figuring out how to put our chaos into words, she has turned her own brokenness into a debut that feels at once raw and refined. What makes it unique is not grand literary fireworks but its disarming honesty. She doesn’t claim authority, she doesn’t preach — instead, she writes as if she is sitting across from you in a dim café, both of you nursing cups of chai, both of you quietly bleeding inside.

 

The premise is simple yet powerful: this is a book about heartbreak, loneliness, and the strange ways silence can teach us to heal. But don’t expect a conventional self-help manual or a tidy memoir. It’s closer to poetry wrapped in prose, where each reflection feels like a fragment of diary pages stitched together with courage. Shiksha writes of carrying pain too deep for words, of smiling on the outside while breaking on the inside, of searching for love in empty spaces. And somewhere in these admissions, you begin to hear your own unspoken thoughts echo back.

 

Her writing style is lyrical without tipping into melodrama. There’s a rhythm in her sentences — short, sharp truths punctuating longer, flowing meditations. The metaphors are vivid: silence as a teacher, scars as stars, solitude as a chrysalis. What I admired most is the balance she strikes between vulnerability and hope. Just when the weight of her sorrow threatens to overwhelm, she drops in a petal of resilience, a reminder that even broken pieces can glimmer if the light hits them right.

 

One passage in particular lingered with me. She describes how silence, once unbearable, slowly became her sanctuary — not absence, but presence; not emptiness, but space to breathe. I found myself pausing, closing the book, and simply listening to the hum of the world around me. How often do we fill our days with noise just to avoid the discomfort of being alone with ourselves? Her words nudged me into stillness, and in that moment, I understood what she meant.

 

The structure of the book is less about linear narrative and more about movement — from despair to acceptance, from loneliness to self-love. Each section feels like a step on a path. If you’re looking for intricate plot twists or polished essays, this isn’t that kind of book. At times, the pacing does waver; a few passages linger longer than necessary, and the repetition of themes may feel heavy. Yet, in a way, that repetition mirrors the actual process of healing — circling the same wound until finally, you find the courage to let it scar.

 

What sets Found in Silence apart is not just its themes of heartbreak and resilience, but the tender way it reframes solitude. Instead of painting aloneness as a void, Shiksha presents it as fertile soil where new roots can grow. For young adults navigating heartbreak, academic pressures, or self-doubt, this book feels like a survival kit made of words. But even for someone older, perhaps weathered by life’s many tempests, there’s solace here — a reminder that no matter how fractured we feel, we can still shine.

 

Personally, the book made me think of my own quiet battles — the nights when words failed, when only silence bore witness. It reminded me that silence isn’t weakness; sometimes it’s the bravest thing we can embrace. That resonance, that deeply personal echo, is what makes this slim debut remarkable.

 

In the end, Found in Silence isn’t perfect, but it doesn’t need to be. Its imperfection is its strength. Like a cracked vase holding fresh flowers, it shows beauty doesn’t require wholeness. Shiksha Sheoran may be young, but her voice carries an old soul’s wisdom — the kind that will meet readers where they are, no matter their stage in life.

 

If you’ve ever smiled through your own shattering, or sought refuge in solitude, let this book sit with you for a while. Not to fix you, but to remind you that healing begins the moment you dare to listen to your own silence. Pick it up, not as literature, but as a companion. You might just find yourself in its quiet glow.

 

 

 

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