Shadows of Kishkinda: Vol. 1 – Daiikin by Nilesh Thakur is a powerful and emotionally charged opening to a dark fantasy saga that blends myth, mystery, and human vulnerability into a gripping narrative. From the very first pages, the novel establishes an atmosphere of unease and sorrow, pulling the reader into a world where loss is not just a memory but a living wound that refuses to heal.
Tag: all about books
Author Feature: Mrs. J. Fernandez
Mrs. J. Fernandez emerges as a distinctive voice in contemporary fiction with The Unseen Trial, a novel that delves deep into the silent corridors of conscience, memory, and spiritual justice. Known for her ability to weave emotional depth with moral complexity, the author crafts a story where the most consequential judgments are not delivered by courts, but by time, faith, and unseen forces that quietly observe human actions.
Book Review: Chhor Ke Is or by Ajay Puranik
Chhor Ke Is Or is a quietly powerful collection that gives voice to lives often pushed to the margins of contemporary storytelling. Ajay Puranik turns his gaze toward senior citizens not with nostalgia alone, but with empathy, honesty, and emotional depth. These stories do not romanticize old age, nor do they reduce it to suffering. Instead, they present later life as a complex emotional landscape where dignity, solitude, memory, regret, resilience, and hope coexist.
Book Release: Right To Die by Jay Karai
In a time when medicine can prolong life but not always relieve suffering, Right To Die by Jay Karai arrives as a bold, thought-provoking novel that dares to engage with one of the most sensitive and complex debates of our age—Physician Aid-in-Dying (PAD). Set against the intense and dramatic backdrop of a courtroom, the book weaves together human emotion, ethical dilemmas, and legal arguments into a gripping narrative that stays with the reader long after the final page.
Author Featured Article: Dr. A. S. Maheshwari
Dr. A. S. Maheshwari’s intellectual journey is a remarkable tapestry woven from multiple disciplines, each adding depth to her understanding of life, consciousness, and the intricate machinery of the human mind. With an academic foundation spanning a Ph.D. in Bioinformatics, an M.Tech in Biotechnology, a Postgraduate Diploma in Bioinformatics, and a B.Tech in Electrochemical Engineering and Technology, she brings a rare and powerful multidimensional perspective to her work.
Why I wrote ‘The Mosaic’ by , Mohammed Abdul Azeem, I.A.S (R)
I did not write The Mosaic to explain how to build a startup in ten steps, nor to promise success through clever tactics or shortcuts. I wrote it because, after years of observing entrepreneurship across industries and geographies, I realised something deeply unsettling: much of what we say about entrepreneurship oversimplifies it. We reduce it to slogans, valuations, and isolated success stories, while ignoring the complex systems that actually allow ideas to survive, grow, or fail.
Author Feature: Kaushik Mohanty
Kaushik Mohanty emerges as a keen observer of human behavior and quiet ironies with While You Wait, a thoughtfully curated collection of micro-stories crafted for the restless rhythms of modern life. Writing with precision and restraint, Mohanty captures the emotional weight of moments that often go unnoticed—the pauses between destinations, the silences between conversations, the stillness where reflection quietly takes shape.
Author Feature: Jatin Vadodariya
Jatin Vadodariya उन लेखकों में हैं जो पाठक को उत्तर देने से पहले प्रश्नों के सामने खड़ा करते हैं। उनकी लेखन-यात्रा किसी उपदेश, सिद्धांत या निश्चित निष्कर्ष से नहीं, बल्कि गहरी जिज्ञासा और आत्म-अवलोकन से जन्म लेती है। अशर्त मन उनके इसी दृष्टिकोण का सशक्त और परिपक्व परिणाम है—एक ऐसी पुस्तक जो मनुष्य के भीतर जमी हुई मान्यताओं को तोड़ने के लिए शोर नहीं मचाती, बल्कि शांत रूप से उन्हें देखने का साहस देती है।
Do Readers Trust Recommendations From Authors More Than Critics?
In an age of overwhelming choices, readers often rely on recommendations to decide what to read next. These recommendations commonly come from two influential sources: authors and literary critics. Both hold authority in the literary world, but the nature of that authority differs.
Book Review – Manthan: A Gods in the Glass City Saga
Manthan: A Gods in the Glass City Saga by Abhishek Mishra The story opens in 1985 on a nameless Himalayan peak, where a dying “Keeper” delivers a terrifying prophecy to his disciple. He warns of a future where men will build a “god” not of wood and stone, but of steel and code—a god that answers but never listens. Fast forward to the present day, and this “God in the Glass” has arrived in the form of Amaravati, a hyper-intelligent city infrastructure spearheaded by the charismatic Vikramaditya Singh.