
“Wuhan: Not A Love Story” by Razi Ahmed is an engrossing thriller, full of suspense. This is a story with all the elements-mingled emotions of love, conflict, intrigue, and tension-which will surely hook readers. It portrays the emotional and psychological challenges a person goes through during certain chaos. The conspiracy theories associated with the origin of the virus have been covered in this piece, depicting how humans have been bearing the harsh conditions and fighting to live through a terrible experience. The story starts with the strange sicknesses of the miners in the Tongguan mountains in 2013 and then moves forward to 2019 as the virus strikes Wuhan, raising an alarm across the world. Celina Chan, a molecular biologist from Harvard, and Victor Kujur, an FBI field agent, set their task to uncover various layers of conspiracy and suspense, as it were, to unmask hidden truths within the time available. The conclusion interlaces all investigative threads and therefore answers most of our pending questions. Resilience, empathy, conspiracy, truth, and human connection are but a few of the themes which this book explores. Ahmed’s writing is quite engaging, and fast-paced. It is replete with multifarious and complex characters, along with unexpected plot twists. This is quite an engrossing book for anyone who loves thrillers that incorporate real-life and imagined elements. I’d rate this book 4/out of 5 Star.
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