17 November 2024 | By: Writing Buddha

7 Lessons of Karm Yoga by Richa Tilokani (Book Review: 4*/5) !!!

2118th BLOG POST

23rd Book of 2024

I remember reading a book by Dale Carnegie when I begun my career named “How to enjoy your life and your job” because people had scared me so much that I won’t be able to manage my personal life once the professional commitments would kick in. Definitely, as we say about “Self-help” books, it did help me initially as few of its teachings stayed somewhere in my subconscious mind. After almost 9 years of work experience, I felt that I need to read another book to get new lessons based on our ancient culture which made me pick up Richa Tilokani’s book “7 Lessons of Karm Yoga”. This 200-pages book published by Rupa also comes up with a tagline that says “Mindset management for Work-Life success”.

 

Richa starts the book explaining us about Karm Yoga as an overview before diving into the details. She helps us understand the three gunas and understand in which of the three we fall in. It helps us get clarity regarding the level at which we stand and where we must aspire to reach. The way she explained Rajo, tamo and sattva gun from modern work-related concepts really made me decipher where do I fall and in what quotient is each of them imbibed in my personality.

 

Authoress has studied the ancient texts very devotedly which can be sensed from her research and the types of quotes and references she uses throughout. The book has many Sanskrit quotes with their respective translation and explanation by the author. She has majorly taken reference from Bhagavad Gita as one of its major sections is based on Karm Yoga. She doesn’t restrict her only till Gita but also used Ved and Upanishad quotes to explain the pointers. She even shares us great words said or written by esteemed personalities like Nelson Mandela, Gandhi etc.

 

 Richa has given practical wisdom and ensures that some of the concepts which authors generally use As-It-Is from the ancient texts that further confuses the readers are explained well. For e.g. there’s a whole section on Desires where Richa clarifies that desires as a concept aren’t wrong completely. We must be aware about the kind of desires we are keeping while preparing our professional goals. Along with giving us professional advices, in the very beginning itself, author tells how important is keeping ourselves physically and mentally fit to create a good base for our professional careers.

 

Like Maslow’s hierarchical model, even author starts giving us her 7 lessons in a similar manner where she explains how our leadership must be based upon good foundation and with time, how we should work upon in refining them rather than trying to follow all the seven principles at once and fail miserably.

 

There are key takeaway sections which helps us note the major points separately. Similarly, author has nicely divided chapters into multiple sections/sub-sections and explaining them with multiple bullet points etc. to make it easier for us to understand the concepts well without getting confused.

 

Overall, the book can be completed in two to three sitting though I would advice to read it slowly and try to implement the small lessons in daily office lives. I am glad authors are using the ancient wisdom and trying to deliver them in modern context to make it easier for us to comprehend and create actionable out of them. I will give this book 4 stars out of 5.

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WRITING BUDDHA


A Glimpse of the Future by Mayank Manohar (Book Review: 4.25*/5) !!!

2117th BLOG POST

22nd Book of 2024

I remember reading Shadow of the Past published by FingerPrint publication exactly 5 years back and I had rated it more than 4 stars – quite much as I wouldn’t rate romantic books that highly because all of them sounded the same. After reading the amazing climax written by the author, Mayank Manohar, I had written the following in my review-

"Talking about the climax, the last paragraph is too open for you to be surprised and shocked for some time. I just couldn’t believe what I read which made me read the paragraph multiple times which made me realize that it’s an open ending and there’s a chance we can find its sequel soon. I would request author to bring it out soon as the way he is writing romance right from his 1st book itself is very promising and I would like to read him more."

 

Finally, after 5 years, author took the story ahead and published the 2nd part of it named “A Glimpse of the Future” which also has the tagline that says “A journey of redemption and resilience”. I must say that the book exactly matches the vibes with its tagline because the way the characterization of Rehan moves on from where it ended in the first book, it’s all about his patience and expectations that sets the future of his life. Author tries to take us deep into the mindset of the person who has lost his first girlfriend and ended up ruining his relationship with his 2nd girlfriend as well. Obviously, he is going through a lot mentally and it has come to a stage where he has to visit a rehab center as well to get back to his zone.

 

Author has very nicely narrated the whole section where Rehan meets with his ex-girlfriend again and gets a chance to revive his relationship. Reading about his past about how the relationship arc went through its ups and downs during the 2nd innings makes this book interesting to read. The book is written in two timelines which are just couple of years apart but it tells about two versions of the protagonist- firstly, what happened with him in the past and secondly, where he is currently in his life due to his past which makes the book exciting as it’s not all-and-all a romance and break-up story but also about the mindset, philosophy and mental health a person has to go through after a big life-transforming event in their life.

 

Mayank makes this book sound like an autobiographical account where we get to read many entries such as diary scribbles where the protagonist writes what’s going in his mind. I felt like re-reading these pages. Then there are multiple sections wherein every sentence is quote-worthy and you feel like highlighting/noting each one of them. Not even once does Mayank gets carried away by the concept of his book and become preachy about mental health. It’s all explained only through the character’s pain and rehab stories.

 

The small catalysts that add up to one’s mental shift such as anxiety, helplessness, failure, rejection, hopelessness etc. are nicely conveyed. Author further tries to explain to his audience and clarify the fact that even after rehab, a person might end up in darkness for a long period of time. He keeps it evident that it doesn’t transform you immediately but things settle down gradually for someone who has gone through mental health issues.

 

In the last few pages, Manohar gives a glimpse into how two people who have walked a similar path in their respective lives related to heartbreaks and mental issues can understand each other through better communication and come together for a better life. Author has used this book to mention and explain every possibility that can lead a person towards a better future after a bad past or present. I am glad that this book shall connect with people who have been into isolation once and talked a lot with themselves. They’ll understand the big monologues where Rehan talks with himself quite often.

 

Overall, this book despite being 300-pages long keeps you invested. I must say that author could have edited it more to bring it down to 240-odd pages as it also become tiring to read the similar state of mind of the protagonist for a very long time. But yes, the book is a hopeful story and Mayank’s writing has only got better with time. I give this book 4.25* out of 5. It is as good as its first part. You can still directly read this book without having to read both the book to understand the story. Author has managed it very well. Go, get it!

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WRITING BUDDHA

16 November 2024 | By: Writing Buddha

Affairs of Deception by Rakesh Kumar Singh (Book Review: 4.25*/5) !!!

2116th BLOG POST

21st Book of 2024

Reading a murder mystery or a suspense book is always the best experience for any reader as the story moves in a very fast paced and keeps us on our toes. Another aspect to it is that we know the way it must be written where the investigators shall be given the main space whereas the people close to the victim shall be given second preference with almost all of them under suspicion. I am glad to have read this book “Affairs of Deception” written by a very experienced author – Rakesh Kumar Singh.

 

The book has treated the murder-mystery as a normal fiction story unlike the above-mentioned template. While reading the book, it doesn’t give you the feeling of reading a thriller. In fact, by middle of the book, you’ll even forget about any murders that has happened in the initial pages. Though the first few pages of the book are difficult due to multiple characters being introduced one after another which makes it hard for us to remember them. I had to create a mind map diagram in my notes which made my task easier. Also, the first 5-10 pages sound like a typical thriller but the way Rakesh changes the tone of the book transforms the whole narrative itself.

 

The characters are nicely created. I am glad to say that author doesn’t forget any of his characters in any of the chapters. Almost all of them are given their share of space so evenly that you might start feeling any of them as the protagonist. The arc of each character is beautifully narrated as we get used to their personalities and their change of decisions. Most of them are gray in nature where they are right and wrong in certain respective aspects but yet you can’t support or defy them completely. Rakesh Kumar Singh is a great story-teller and knows how to use the props in the book well.

 

As the author himself is from government service working with Central Reserve Police Force, he has used his knowledge well in describing the nature of work of people involved in services, politics, business and so on. Their relationship with their family and how they can end up getting submerged into the game of power, greed, lies, lust and crime is described aptly. Even when author talks about the modern-day marriage problems of extra-marital affairs or lust-based actions, he writes them giving so much attention that you don’t treat those sections as just another romantic or love-making section but treat them as an important event in the book. I liked how author treats this taboo-based topics without making them sound a pure criminal act.

 

The book has been divided in short chapters which makes it easy to complete in one or two sittings. The pre-climax set-up is amazing and makes you enjoy the last portion of the book equally. Just in the climax, a random person ends up as the criminal which makes it a bit disappointing because as a reader you keep on raising your fingers among the main characters hence it upsets when a not-so-relevant character turns out to be the criminal. Anyway, the book is a great page-turner and even if you remove the thriller aspect, the story is a nice-to-read work. I would rate this book 4.25* out of 5.

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WRITING BUDDHA