Book Review: The Alchemist
By Dansaleh Aliyu Yahya
After reading Paulo Coelho’s The Alchemist, this fictional story of a young boy created a river of tears in my gapes. The main character, Santiago, a young lad, dreams and believes that dreams come true when someone follows the way to see them awaken.
At first, he (the boy) taught us that travels were the greatest sources of knowledge, experience, and wisdom when he told his father that he wanted to become a shepherd because of the love he had for knowing the true nature of his world. Nevertheless, he sold his sheep and searched for his “Personal Legend” because he now realised it was more important than just rearing animals.
Throughout the story, we would learn that if the younger person needs to have a useful life, they must learn and believe the philosophy of their older ones. On his journey, Santiago met many good people.
In addition, each of them told him one or more essential facts about life and everything. For example, he met a king named Melchizedek, who said, “ When you want something, all universe conspires in helping you to achieve it”. I think this is the most important sentence in the book.
The books also taught us that we shouldn’t bother ourselves with our past but instead focus on our present to build a more fantastic future. He was told that when he concentrated on the present, he would always be happy.
In his treasure search, the boy met a young woman called Fatima. They started loving each other, and he promised her he’d be back one day to marry her. There I remembered the Hausa Proverb that says, “ Garin masoyi baya nisa”. He was about to lose his treasure because of love, but the alchemist summoned him.
The story has a lot of must-be-learned philosophies that couldn’t be mentioned here due to their meanness, but I’ll try to pen down some of them below to build eagerness to read the book in those that didn’t read it. These ideologies include:
— “If you play cards the first time, you’re almost sure to win. It’s called beginners luck.”
— “Everything that happens once can never happen again. But everything that happens twice will surely happen the third time.”
— “Every day was there to be lived or mark one’s departure on one word ‘maktub’”.
— “If you start by promising what you don’t even have yet, you’ll lose your desire to work toward getting it.”
Let me stop here. However, if you have not read the book, you should look for it. I assure you, you won’t be the same person you were before reading it.
Dansaleh Aliyu Yahya can be contacted via dansalealiyu@gmail.com.