Vine a este libro totalmente en blanco. Pensé que sabía de lo que trataba y me llevé una sorpresa enorme, pero en el buen sentido.
No esperaba encontrar una historia tan honesta y cruda. Más que nada se sintió muy real. Es profundamente triste, pero esperanzador a la vez. Con una complejidad que me sobrepasaba a veces, fue hermoso leer a este autor del que no conocía absolutamente nada.
Me costó inicialmente encontrar mi ritmo con la historia, pero una vez que lo hice, se me pasó volando. 
Muy recomendado si te gusta la historia, con toques de crecimiento emocional.

Thank you so much to the author, NetGalley and the publisher for an eARC in exchange for my honest review. 
adventurous challenging emotional reflective medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: Complicated
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Complicated

Pinto, the son of a Jewish apothecary in Sarajevo, was made for gentler times. He’s a dreamer. He seeks love and pleasant sensations and ease. He doesn’t know it but, when we first meet him in Aleksandar Hemon’s shattering novel The World and All That It Holds, his world is about to vanish into chaos and bloodshed. On the day that the novel begins, Pinto opens the family shop, flirts with a Viennese military officer, and wanders into a curbside seat for the assassination of the Archduke Franz Ferdinand. Pinto is almost instantly drafted into a Bosnian regiment of the doomed Austro-Hungarian army. We know that Pinto is headed into one of the bloodiest conflicts in human history, so it’s kind of funny that he meets the love of his life in the middle of a warzone...

Read the rest of my review at A Bookish Type. I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley, for review consideration.