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If there’s one thing that relaxes you a lot, it’s reading. And now that spring has also arrived and you can be more in contact with nature, you can combine the two pleasures. But what to read exactly? After the best selection of March, here are the best books to read in April 2021.
Books to read in April 2021
Reading is among the most beautiful and carefree things in the world because it allows us to explore unknown, distant and parallel worlds, to immerse ourselves in our imagination and to fly away. It also makes us free, light and above all opens the doors to new discoveries, new knowledge and new interests. In conclusion, reading is beneficial and saving for the body and soul. So, if you haven’t done it yet, start reading a few pages a day and you will see that you won’t regret it.
In our selection for April 2021, the offer is decidedly wide and diversified, designed for every kind and taste. From thrillers to love stories to adventure novels, here are the best titles.
Nietzsche on the road
By Paolo Pagani, Nietzsche on the road is a journey of adventure and exploration into the meanders and the most intimate aspects of the philosopher’s life. Divided into three stages, it faces different moments in Nietzsche’s life in three different places: Germany, Switzerland and Italy and part of the French Riviera.
A book worth reading in one go!
Fleishman in pieces
By Taffy Brodesser-Akner, Fleishman in Pieces talks about the complicated period that the protagonist Toby Fleishman lives, in fact, between the end of the marriage, the work as a successful doctor and a turbulent love life full of encounters and flirtations with women known via apps and social networks. But the new precarious balance is destined to shatter when the ex-wife disappears, leaving him with her two teenage children. Thus he finds himself facing a new life and a new nervous breakdown.
The restless
By Linn Ullmann, The restless is a beautiful story and an indescribable novel, full of pure and profound love, affection, memories, nostalgia but also fear. Fear of the co-star, a Swedish director, of forgetting his whole life and losing his memory, of not being able to tell everything he wants to his daughter who is a writer for the book about her life. In fact, just when his daughter joins him on the island where he lives to start writing, he forgets and loses his memory. Thus begins a difficult but melancholy journey of rediscovering the most intimate memories of a father, mother and daughter.
The loneliness of the subversive
By Marco Bechis, The solitude of the subversive is the autobiographical account of his sad and tragic experience, from the kidnapping by a group of plainclothes soldiers to his release from prison. A story at times raw but which leads to reflect on the difficulties, on life and on the fear that this causes very often.
The woman in the purple skirt
By Natsuko Imamura, The Woman with the Purple Skirt tells how the protagonist always sits at the same bench every afternoon in a large park in a Japanese city while eating a cream brioche. Her story is told by the narrator, the woman in the yellow skirt. Nothing is revealed to us: we have to find out what happens to the first woman and if the fates of these two women are intertwined.