
Yaseen khan
Bio
“Storyteller with a restless mind and a heart full of questions. I write about unseen emotions, quiet struggles, and the moments that change us. Between reality and imagination, I chase words that challenge, comfort, and connect.”
Stories (16)
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The Conjuring: Last Rites : Review
Story & Setup The film opens with the Warrens’ daughter, Judy Warren (Mia Tomlinson), engaged to Tony Spera (Ben Hardy), and introduces the troubled Smurl family whose home is haunted by a demonic force tied back to the Warrens’ very first case.
By Yaseen khan2 months ago in Beat
HIM (2025): Victory Isn’t the Only Prize : Review
Story & Premise Directed by Justin Tipping and produced by Jordan Peele’s Monkeypaw Productions, HIM centres on the promising young quarterback Tyriq Withers as Cameron “Cam” Cade, who is invited to train under the aging legend Marlon Wayans’ Isaiah White at a secluded compound. On the surface it appears to be a sports-mentorship story, but as Cam advances, things become sinister: rituals, isolation, bodily risk and supernatural hints underscore his pursuit.
By Yaseen khan2 months ago in Beat
One Battle After Another : Review
Story & Structure The film begins in full throttle: we follow a rebel group named French 75, led by the fearless Teyana Taylor as Perfidia. They're engaged in high-stakes, borderline absurd militant action across the U.S.–Mexico border.
By Yaseen khan2 months ago in Beat
Sinners (2025): The Dance of Darkness and Redemption : Review
Cinema, at its best, doesn’t just entertain — it haunts. It lingers, echoes, and unsettles. Ryan Coogler’s Sinners (2025) does exactly that. It’s not merely a film; it’s an experience that crawls under your skin, beats inside your heart like a drum, and forces you to confront the most primal parts of yourself. This fusion of supernatural horror and soul-piercing music stands out as one of the year’s boldest and most talked-about cinematic experiments — a movie that dares to be strange, lyrical, and deeply human.
By Yaseen khan2 months ago in Beat
Nineteen Eighty-Four : Summary
George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four, published in 1949, is one of the most powerful dystopian novels ever written. Set in a grim future where freedom, individuality, and truth itself are crushed by totalitarian control, the book explores how fear and manipulation can enslave the human mind. Orwell’s prophetic vision remains hauntingly relevant even today, as it mirrors the dangers of propaganda, censorship, and absolute political authority.
By Yaseen khan3 months ago in BookClub
Rich Dad Poor Dad: Summary
Rich Dad Poor Dad: Summary By Robert T. Kiyosaki Rich Dad Poor Dad is one of the most influential books on personal finance and wealth mindset ever written. It isn’t just about money—it’s about how people think about money. The author, Robert Kiyosaki, shares the lessons he learned growing up with two father figures: his biological father (the Poor Dad) and his best friend’s father (the Rich Dad). Through their contrasting beliefs, Kiyosaki reveals how attitudes toward money shape people’s futures.
By Yaseen khan3 months ago in Education
Grace and Judgment
Introduction Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice, published in 1813, stands as a celebrated masterpiece of English literature, admired for its keen insight into social manners, marriage norms, and the intricate dance between pride and humility. Set in Regency-era England, the novel explores the tension between individual desire and societal expectation, centering on the evolving relationship between Elizabeth Bennet and Mr. Fitzwilliam Darcy. Through wit, irony, and profound moral observation, Austen crafts a timeless narrative that examines human character, misjudgment, and personal transformation. This summary reflects upon the novel’s principal events, its richly drawn characters, and the moral lessons embedded within its graceful prose.
By Yaseen khan3 months ago in BookClub
The Girl by the Sea – Part 3. AI-Generated.
The days in Havenbrook began to blend into one another, stitched together by the rhythm of waves and the quiet companionship that neither Ethan nor Amelia fully understood. He would find her by the shore each morning, sketching in silence while the gulls cried above. She never asked him why he returned, and he never explained. Sometimes, he brought her seashells without meaning to, setting them beside her like apologies left unspoken. Other times, he simply stood behind her, watching the sea breathe and break. To anyone else, it was nothing—but to them, it was everything. A wordless understanding, fragile but real. Ethan had promised himself he wouldn’t stay, yet with every sunrise, his absence became harder to imagine. Amelia, too, began to feel the quiet tether between them tighten, though she pretended not to notice. Love, she realized, often begins in silence—growing roots beneath the things we never say.
By Yaseen khan3 months ago in Fiction
The Girl by the Sea – Part 2. AI-Generated.
Ethan Cole thought he had mastered the art of vanishing—slipping through places without leaving a trace, never allowing roots to form. But ever since the morning he crossed paths with Amelia Hart, something within him had shifted, quietly and unwillingly. He found himself wandering back to the shoreline where she often sat, her presence lingering in the salt-stained air like a question he refused to answer. He told himself he didn’t care, that she was only a momentary distraction, yet his feet betrayed him, guiding him back to the very place he swore he would not return. Amelia stood once again at the water’s edge, sketchbook resting against her palm, her gaze drifting across the ocean with the softness of someone who believed in things he no longer did—hope, healing, the possibility of gentle endings. When he approached, she didn’t turn to him, yet she felt him, as one feels the first drop of rain before the storm. “You came back,” she said quietly. Ethan’s silence was not agreement, but it was not denial either. He looked at her drawing—the horizon, stretching farther than any man could run. “I don’t stay,” he murmured, almost to himself. “I don’t belong anywhere.”
By Yaseen khan3 months ago in Fiction
The Girl by the Sea – Part 1. AI-Generated.
The sun had barely risen over the small coastal town of Havenbrook, stretching soft golden light across silent streets and sleepy rooftops. Morning mist curled over the shoreline, wrapping the ocean in a gentle haze. It was here, at the jagged edge of town where land kissed the sea, that Amelia Hart often found herself—barefoot on damp sand, sketchbook in hand, searching for something she couldn’t quite name.
By Yaseen khan3 months ago in Fiction
The Promise Beneath the Willow. AI-Generated.
The town of Meadowridge was quiet in all seasons, but especially in spring, when the old willow tree by the lake wore its green veil like a secret. It was there, under those cascading branches, that Mira first met Adeel—on a day scented with wildflowers and the sound of soft ripples kissing the shore.
By Yaseen khan3 months ago in Fiction










