Writer : Elif Shafak
- Shipping Time : 10 Days
- Policy : Return/Cancellation?
You can return physically damaged products or wrong items delivered within 24 hours with photo/video proof.
Contact Customer Support for return initiation and receive return authorization via email. Securely package for return.
Refunds for eligible returns are processed within 7-10 business days via Bank Transfer.
Order cancellation allowed within 24 hours of placing it. Standard policy not applicable for undamaged/wrong product cases. Detailed info. - Genre : Literature>Short Story & Micro/Flash Stories
- Publication Year : 2015
- ISBN No : NA
- Binding : Card Board (Hard)
- Pages : 368
- Weight : 515 gms
- Height x Width x Depth : 8.5x5.5x0.5 Inch
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About the Book
The Forty Rules of Love – A Tale of Passion, Faith, and Transformation
"Every true love and friendship is a story of unexpected transformation. If we are the same person before and after we loved, that means we haven't loved enough..."
Ella Rubinstein appears to have it all—a comfortable life, a stable marriage, and three teenage children. Yet, beneath this façade of domestic contentment, a quiet emptiness lingers, an ache for something deeper, something more.
When she comes across a manuscript about the thirteenth-century Sufi poet Rumi and his transformative bond with the wandering dervish Shams of Tabriz, she is instantly drawn into a world of mysticism, poetry, and forbidden love. With each of Shams’ forty rules of life and love, Ella’s carefully structured world begins to unravel, pushing her towards a journey of self-discovery and a meeting with the manuscript’s enigmatic author—one that will change her forever.
Steeped in Sufi wisdom and lyrical storytelling, The Forty Rules of Love is a spellbinding meditation on faith, destiny, and the power of love to alter our very souls.
"Enlightening, enthralling. An affecting paean to faith and love." — Metro
"Colourfully woven and beguilingly intelligent." — Daily Telegraph
"The past and present fit together beautifully in a passionate defence of passion itself." — The Times