This book hasn’t been written in a particularly engaging way. The story, characters and everything else could’ve been written very well. Sehmat Khan, is in my opinion, a character who is too good to be true, as are many others in this novel. This book has been inspired by true events and hence I think it should’ve stood by the true events, rather than creating imaginary fantasies. In the end where the supposed god-man comes in the form of a fakir and suddenly Sehmat brightens up makes no sense. It may to people who are religious, but in my opinion they seem very far from reality. While Sehmat is a brave character, she is very authoritative and not very likeable. My two stars are only for the main story and the theme. The movie, in this case, was much better than the book but I think the author has the capability to improve.