


Thus, while I loved Vansh and Naina, I didn’t get enough of their story to make the relationship work for me until the last couple of chapters. There was just too much of the pointless charity story and not enough relationship. If a writer is going to focus on social problems, then the story should be seriously addressed rather than living in a fantasy where everything can be solved if people just clap their hands and wish really hard. Unfortunately, this book needed more romance and less fantasy homelessness elimination. I even liked the interactions with Naina and Vansh and thought that their romance could work really well. What I expected to really have problems with - Naina, who is almost a villain in the last book, I ended up having great sympathy for and actually began to like. The book felt scattered and unfinished in the end because the stories did not reach a satisfying conclusion. Unfortunately, as with the last book, there was too much going on in this one. She also writes very complex and interesting characters.

OPINION: I really love the tenor and flow of Dev’s books. Now the two are fighting for funding even as a new relationship arises between them.

Instead, she is dedicating herself to her project to bring independence to women in South Asia. Naina, who is thirty-eight, has just ended a ten-year fake relationship with Vansh’s older brother. His new project, however, puts him in direct conflict with Naina Kohli. When he returns home, he finds a new project to dedicate himself to - homelessness in San Francisco. In his mid-twenties, he is charming and seems to live a charmed life. THE STORY: Vansh Raje is the youngest of the Raje family. That being said the last couple of chapters of this book are amazing and almost worth the slog through the rest. The book seems unfocused with too many ideas and not enough payoff. The Emma Project (The Rajes, #4) by Sonali DevįINAL DECISION: Loved the romance but wish there was more of it and less about fantasy nonprofit stuff that has many pages and little significance in the story.
