Book Review: Reiki and Me: A Memoir by Mansi Nair

Reiki and Me: A Memoir by Mansi Nair is a deeply moving exploration of self-healing, transformation, and spiritual awakening. It’s not just a personal story—it’s a mirror reflecting the universal journey of rediscovering oneself through pain, faith, and surrender. Mansi’s words flow with honesty and vulnerability, allowing readers to step into her world, one where the silent whispers of Reiki illuminate the darkest corners of life. The book’s strength lies in its authenticity; every chapter feels like a conversation between the author and the reader, intimate yet powerful, grounded yet ethereal.

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Author feature: Roop Lakhani

In a world where validation often comes from others, and self-worth is tied to approval, finding one’s true voice can be the hardest — yet most necessary — journey. For Roop Lakhani, that journey has been both personal and purposeful. A renowned Tarot Coach, Numerologist, Mindset Healer, and Consciousness Coach, Roop has spent decades helping people recognize the unseen patterns that shape their lives — and guiding them toward emotional freedom, self-awareness, and authentic expression.

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QUESTIONNAIRE – For Author Piyush Mahiskey By Neel Preet

Authors’ Background: Author Piyush Mahiskey is a novelist and Technology Architect based in Nagpur, India. A graduate of S.F.S. High School, YCCE College (B.E. in Electrical Engineering), and BITS Pilani (M.Tech. in Software Systems), he blends technical clarity with literary restraint to craft fiction that listens more than it speaks. His debut novel, ‘Durga In Nigeria’ explores the diaspora rituals, emotional inheritance, and the quiet reckoning of identity through a lens that refuses spectacle!

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Book Review: Along The Nile: An Egyptian Chase by Miraaya Veer

“Along The Nile: An Egyptian Chase” by Miraaya Veer is a remarkable blend of adventure, mythology, and youthful curiosity, all wrapped in an irresistibly imaginative narrative. It’s hard to believe that this sweeping tale of time travel, riddles, and ancient Egyptian magic was written by a thirteen-year-old author, as the book demonstrates a level of creativity, depth, and narrative control far beyond her years.

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Book Review: Blight of the Ivory by Yudhishthir Singh

In “Blight of the Ivory,” Yudhishthir Singh presents readers with a dark, unsettling, and deeply introspective work of horror fiction that transcends the genre’s trappings. It’s not a book filled with cheap jump scares or grotesque imagery designed solely for shock value. Instead, Singh builds an atmosphere of dread around something far more chilling and relatable: the consequences of unchecked ambition, the corruption of morality, and the weight of guilt that follows when power is seized without thought of the price.

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