देवांश शर्मा की कृति “मेरे परमपिता श्रीराम” एक ऐसी रचना है जो पाठक को धर्म, दर्शन और आत्मानुभूति के संगम तक ले जाती है। यह पुस्तक न तो केवल रामकथा का पुनर्पाठ है और न ही एक साधारण आत्मकथा, बल्कि यह एक संवेदनशील मनुष्य की गहन आंतरिक यात्रा का साक्ष्य है। जीवन के सबसे कठिन क्षणों में अपने जन्मदाता पिता को खोने के बाद लेखक ने श्रीराम को केवल आराध्य देव के रूप में नहीं, बल्कि पिता-तत्व के रूप में अनुभव किया—और यही अनुभूति इस ग्रंथ की आत्मा बन जाती है।
Tag: Reading Books
Book Review: The Mindful Nest
The Mindful Nest by Kirti Chavan is a warm, reassuring, and deeply relatable book that speaks directly to new parents navigating the often overwhelming early years of parenthood. Written by a mother who herself stepped into this life-changing role just three years ago, the book carries an authenticity that immediately sets it apart from many conventional parenting guides.
Author Feature: Kirti Chavan
Kirti Chavan brings a refreshing, heartfelt voice to the world of parenting literature with The Mindful Nest, a book shaped by lived experience, emotional honesty, and conscious reflection. Having entered motherhood just three years ago, the author writes not as a distant expert, but as a parent who has stood exactly where new parents stand—overwhelmed, uncertain, exhausted, and deeply in love all at once.
The Space Between by Dr. Manoj K Kukreja
The Space Between: Strangers to Friends, Friends to Strangers is a quietly powerful and emotionally resonant book that lingers long after the last page is turned. Dr. Manoj K Kukreja does not attempt to impress with dramatic twists or grand declarations; instead, he draws the reader into the subtle, often unnoticed moments that define human connection. This is a book that understands that the most meaningful stories are not always loud—they unfold in silences, pauses, and unspoken feelings.
Author Spotlight Article- Krishna Suresh
In an era defined by rapid technological advancement, automation, and artificial intelligence, Krishna Suresh stands out as a voice reminding the world of an enduring truth: human skills remain irreplaceable. An accomplished author, behavioural trainer, and thought leader in soft skills and emotional intelligence, Krishna has dedicated over a decade to helping individuals and organisations rediscover the power of communication, empathy, and self-awareness.
Author Feature: Niksham
In an age where crime fiction often flirts with glamour, Niksham’s “Verdict of Silence” stands out as a haunting reminder that true justice is rarely clean — and silence, at times, is the loudest scream. This dark and gripping thriller doesn’t just tell a story of murder; it exposes the fractures in a system built to protect, and the moral chaos that follows when that system fails.
Author Feature: Anita Srivastava
In an age where speed often overshadows reflection, Anita Srivastava’s “Aastha Samvad – Mini Shivpuran” arrives as a moment of stillness — a work that invites readers to pause, reflect, and reconnect with the divine. This compact yet profound retelling of the Shiva Purana distills the vast ocean of Lord Shiva’s wisdom, grace, and eternal truth into simple, heartfelt language that touches the modern reader’s soul.
Author Feature: Dr. Ashish Pratap Singh
In a time when the intersection of faith, law, and modernity demands greater understanding, Dr. Ashish Pratap Singh’s book “Modern Muslim Law” emerges as a vital scholarly contribution to contemporary legal literature. Clear, analytical, and deeply researched, the book explores how the rich traditions of Islamic jurisprudence continue to shape — and adapt within — the frameworks of modern legal systems.
Author Feature: Vivek Kumar Tyagi
Some writers imagine worlds. Others simply observe them — and in doing so, capture the poetry hidden in everyday life. Vivek Kumar Tyagi, in his latest book “Yellow Line,” belongs firmly to the latter. After publishing three acclaimed poetry collections, he returns with something refreshingly real — a collection of 25 true stories, all drawn from his daily metro rides to work.
Author Feature: Shruti Mukherjee
Every once in a while, a young storyteller emerges whose imagination feels far older than their years. Shruti Mukherjee, author of “Cursed: The Smira Archives,” is one such voice — a Class 8 student whose debut fantasy novel reads like it was written by someone who has lived a thousand lives. Bold, emotional, and steeped in mythic tension, her story speaks not only of monsters and destiny but of identity, courage, and the human heart.