28 September 2022

#BookLove Wings of Fire by A. P. J. Abdul Kalam and Arun Tiwari

About The Book

The 'Wings of Fire' is an autobiography by visionary scientist Dr APJ Abdul Kalam, who from very humble beginnings rose to be the President of India.

The book is full of insights, personal moments and life experiences of Dr Kalam. It gives us an understanding of his journey to success.

My Thoughts

This is book about Dr APJ Abdul Kalam and his humble life.

It gives the readers a glimpse of his early life, education, and career as a scientist in HAL, DRDO, and ISRO.

One of the greatest learning from the book is that that no matter how you begin your journey (humble or privileged), the times you fail don’t matter. If you have the spirit and belief in yourself and your cause, you will eventually see a bright ending.

The book also focuses on the moral values that should be curated from a young age.

Overall, this is a great read.

Book Links

Amazon India | Amazon USA

About the Author

Arun Tiwari rose to fame as an author with his book Wings of Fire, which he co-authored with Dr. A.P.J. Abdul Kalam. He's a missile scientist who worked under the guidance of Kalam. Tiwari contributed to the design of the missiles, Akash and Trishul and is the first Indian who designed a titanium bottle to power missiles. Apart from this, Tiwari has been the director at the Cardiovascular Technology Institute in Hyderabad. He received the Defense Technology Spin-Off Award for developing the Kalam-Raju stent.

Authors on the Web

Arun Tiwari| A. P. J. Abdul Kalam

21 September 2022

#BookReview Rewriting Your Mental Script by Khadijah Adams

 

About The Book

Success is only a habit that’s achieved when you have the right mindset. If you attempt to force new patterns or routines into your life while hanging on to your old way of thinking, the new patterns won’t be effective and you will eventually end up back where you started.

This book is meant to teach you how to reprogram your mind for success by implementing 8 key mindsets so that you can have the success you desire in all areas of your life.

My Thoughts

I am not a big fan of self-help books. Somehow I find the suggestions are too generic and don’t sit with me well. Hence I read very few such books.

After finishing this book, one thing I have to say, the concepts are discussed in brief but to the point. The book doesn’t give any quick fix to the problems, rather suggests taking your time to deal with things.

Overall, this is a good book to read and rediscover oneself.

Book Links

Amazon India | Amazon USA

About the Author

Cassondra Khadijah Adams is an Entrepreneur, Investor and Motivational Speaker originally from Sugar Land, Texas and now resides in Chandler, AZ. She is a single mother of 4 amazing sons, a grandmother of 10, and has successfully started three businesses in different industries proving that she has the mindset to succeed. 

Ms Adams' mission is to help women in business across the country and as the founder of "Girl Get That Money", Ms Adams seeks to empower women to become their best; by reaching beyond what is normal, to accomplish what is great. Her philosophy is that "Girls Compete but Women Empower!"

Author on the Web

Website | Email | Instagram| Facebook | Twitter 

15 September 2022

All Kinds of Wrong by Shilpa Suraj @shilpaauthor @bookreviewtours #AllKindsOfWrong #RomanticSuspense


What does a lifestyle guru do when her life starts to fall apart?


Alia Dubey is being stalked. The problem is no one believes her. Not the cops, not her family…and well, she doesn’t really have any friends.
Until the day her sister calls in a favour and asks her friend from the Intelligence Bureau to check on Alia and the gifts she’s been receiving.
Officer Avinash Rathore has better things to do than babysit a spoilt socialite with delusions of danger. Until he walks in to find her home broken into and an innocuous bouquet of red roses placed there. While everything points to an obsessed lover, Avinash’s instincts are screaming that there is more at play.
The gifts keep arriving, escalating from roses to far more sinister things…each with an intimate note hinting at a personal agenda. But whose?
The police have a primary suspect – Alia herself. They’re convinced she’s mentally ill and the one planting the evidence that points to a stalker.
But Avinash knows there is more. Far from mentally ill, the ditzy socialite he’d expected to meet is incisively intelligent, staggeringly attractive and devastatingly dangerous to his otherwise sensible mind.
They find themselves in a race against an unknown opponent who has only one thing in their mind – to destroy Alia’s life and leave her standing in the ruins.
And then Alia goes missing. And Avinash realizes that he stands to lose not just the race but, everything. For the ditzy socialite, the one who is All Kinds of Wrong for him is suddenly the only one who can make his world Right again.


Read an Excerpt from All Kinds of Wrong


“Why?” she asked her big sister, bewildered. “Why is this happening? I’m really not the sort to inspire grand passion.” 

“Oh you inspire tons of passion, sweetheart,” Avinash said, humorously. “Just not the sort that you’d normally expect.” 

She glared at him. He smiled back, blandly. 

“I’m going to go meet the cops I know in the evening, but it would help if I had a little more to give them to go on.” 

“Like what?” she asked, numbly. 
“Why don’t you give me a little information on the neighbours you’ve interacted with?” 

She stared at him, blankly. 

“Right,” he muttered. “I forgot. You don’t do relationships.” 

“She does acquaintances though,” Aria butted in. “Don’t you, Als?” 

Alia stared at her. “What does that even mean?” 

“What do you know about your neighbours, Als?” Aria sighed. 

“Well, there is dog guy on the second floor. He walks all four of his dogs every morning when I’m going for a jog,” Alia said. “Two Labradors, one Poodle and a mongrel.” 

“Great,” Avinash sat down in front of her, nodding encouragingly. “What else did you notice?”

“He looks a lot like his mongrel.” 

Avinash blinked. “Jeez, you’re a piece of work,” he said with a soft laugh. 

“He does,” Alia insisted. “I’ll show you.” 

“Okay.” He held his hands up in a gesture of peace. “Who else did you notice?” 

“The old lady who lives two doors down always smells of cheese.” Alia muttered. “Stinks up the lift every time. I think she lives alone because I’ve never seen anyone else come out of that flat.” 

Avinash was scribbling on a little notepad he’d produced out of thin air. 

“Oh and then there is the serial killer,” she said, snapping her fingers in the air. 

Avinash froze. “Excuse me?” 

“Gotcha,” Alia giggled. “Sorry. Couldn’t resist.” 

“There is a big, burly man with tattoos and dreadlocks who lives on the third floor. He uses the gym sometimes at the same time as I do. He’s very sweet and considerate. Always wipes his sweat off any equipment he uses.” 

“A real gem,” Avinash agreed drily. 

“Then there is the girl who always wants to be my friend, no matter how many times I tell her I’m not interested. She lives on this floor too. Oh and the couple on the first floor who invited me for dinner but I didn’t go because I think they’re swingers and I wasn’t looking forward to being proven right that night.” 

Aria stifled a smile when Avinash shot her a look. 

“Then, of course, there is the couple on the floor below us. They have a toddler who sounds like he’s being murdered most of the time. But, of course, that isn’t true. He’s clearly alive because I see him eating sand in the playground when I go for my jog.” 

“A very good clue,” Avinash said. 

“And then there is the eighty-year-old man in the wheelchair who forced himself on me in the elevator.” 

“What?” Avinash snapped to attention. 

“Well,” Alia said, frowning. “He said he wanted to tell me something and when I leaned down to hear him more clearly, he kissed me on my lips. The dirty, old goat.” 

“And what did you do?” Aria asked, aghast.

“Well, I pressed the button to stop the elevator and then I deflated the tyres of his wheelchair while he squawked at me. Once I got the elevator moving, I got off and left without helping him. From what I heard on the building whatsapp group, he was stuck there for the better part of an hour before someone found him.” 

Aria and Avinash just stared at her. 

“What?” she demanded. 

“Nothing,” Avinash said, faintly. “I just finally understand why you don’t do relationships.” 


About the Author:


Shilpa Suraj wears many hats - corporate drone, homemaker, mother to a fabulous toddler and author.

An avid reader with an overactive imagination, Shilpa has weaved stories in her head since she was a child. Her previous stints at Google, in an ad agency and as an entrepreneur provide colour to her present day stories, both fiction and non-fiction.


Contact the Author:
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14 September 2022

#BookReview Shog's Best Friends by Lisette Starr

About The Book

"Shog's best friends" is a bright, fun way for younger children to learn about finding friendships. Shog the dog desperately wants friends, but he only wants to mix with other dogs. When Shog has an accident, Lilly Frog and a cheerful pig called Piggle to come to his aid and he learns a powerful lesson.

A true friend doesn't have to be a dog, just like him! A true friend is someone who is kind and caring, and there when it counts, even if they are "that shade of green!"

My Thoughts

I got this book for my 4-year-old daughter. I read the story to her and she loved it.

This teaches kids about friendship. Also, this book emphasizes a lot on accepting all people, not expecting friends only from your own kind.

This lesson is not only for kids, but adults also.

Overall, a superb book for children.

Book Links

Amazon India | Amazon USA

About the Author

Lisette Starr is a doting aunty of nine and the step mum of one. Originally from the UK her husband and she now live on the edge of the forest just outside of Melbourne in Daylesford, one of the quirkiest towns in Australia. 

Starr loves writing verses. She started writing songs when she was nine, and have been writing since. She has a degree in Film & TV, have written and directed several short films and one feature, made a few video clips and has been a finalist in the "Filmmaker's International screenwriting awards" three times. Starr has also won a number of small short story competitions.

Author on the Web

GoodReads

07 September 2022

#BookLove Stories from Tagore by Rabindranath Tagore (English Translation)

 

About The Book

This book is an English translation of some of the best short stories by Tagore. The stories are The kabuliwala, The Home-coming, Once there was a king, The child’s return, Master Masai, Subha, The postmaster and many more.

My Thoughts

To be honest, I haven’t read this book, but I have read it, well how come? The answer is, I have read all the stories in Bengali, many many times.

Short Stories by Tagore is a gold mine. A short-length story doesn’t qualify to be a short story. The main theme of any short story is it should give you an ocean in a drop. And, Tagore is a master of writing short stories.

My all-time favourite short stories are The Drought [Mahesh] by Sarat Chandra Chattopadhyay and The Home-coming (Chuti) by Rabindranath Tagore.

Let’s talk about Home-coming (Chuti). This story is about a child longing for his home, his mother who sort of rejected him, and his village.

There is a paragraph in the book which described the struggles of a teenager. It was written around 1892 and is still relevant today, in 2021. That is the brilliance of Tagore.

Not reading this book is probably a crime.

Book Links

Amazon India | Amazon USA

About the Author

Rabindranath Tagore was a Nobel Laureate for Literature (1913) as well as one of India’s greatest poets and the composer of independent India’s national anthem, as well as that of Bangladesh. He wrote successfully in all literary genres, but was first and foremost a poet, publishing more than 50 volumes of poetry. He was a Bengali writer who was born in Calcutta and later traveled around the world. He was knighted in 1915, but gave up his knighthood after the massacre of demonstrators in India in 1919.

Author on the Web

Wikipedia