Review of Building India's Upstarts: A Bootstrapped Entrepreneur’s Playbook for Success by Narasimhan Raghavan


Rating: 5/5

What I liked most about this book is that it feels practical from the very beginning. It does not try to sell the usual startup dream of huge funding, fast headlines, and overnight success. Instead, it talks about building a business in a steady and sensible way, through bootstrapping, profitability, and careful growth. That made it feel much more real to me than many other entrepreneurship books.

Why the idea behind it stayed with me

The main idea of the book is something I genuinely connected with. It talks about “upstart” businesses, meaning traditional businesses that grow through small improvements, strong execution, and operational excellence rather than just disruptive technology. I found that angle refreshing because it matches the reality of how many businesses are actually built, especially in India. It did not feel far removed from the ground level. It felt close to real business life.

What I got from reading it

As I moved through the book, I kept feeling that it is written for people who want to build something useful, not just something impressive. The focus on financial discipline, sustainable growth, and doing business with limited resources made a lot of sense to me. I liked that it treats profitability and control as strengths, not weaknesses. That is one of the reasons the book felt calm, grounded, and honest to me.

Why the author’s background matters

The book felt stronger to me because the author is not speaking from theory alone. Narasimhan Raghavan has actually bootstrapped, built, and sold a national logistics business in India, and that background gives the writing real weight. When someone has lived through the kind of journey they are writing about, the advice feels more believable and practical. That is exactly how I felt while reading it.

The writing style and feel

I also liked the tone of the book. It does not try too hard to sound clever or overly motivational. It stays focused on the subject and keeps the business lessons at the center. For me, that made it easier to trust. I could read it without feeling like I was being pushed into exaggerated startup hype. It felt like a book that respects the reader’s time and intelligence.

My honest takeaway

Overall, this was a very useful and thoughtful read for me. I liked that it shows a different side of entrepreneurship, one that is less loud but more sustainable. It made me think more about discipline, execution, and building something that can actually last. My only very small note is that the style is more serious than exciting, but for this kind of book, that actually works well.

Review of As Ayodhyā Caroled an’ Dirged: A Literary Retelling of the Valmiki Rāmāyaṇa: Philosophy and History (Part I) by Anik Chaudhary


Rating: 5/5

When I started reading this book, I immediately felt that it was not written in a simple surface level way. It is a serious and thoughtful work, but at the same time it also has a very emotional and literary soul. What stayed with me most is that this book does not just present the Rāmāyaṇa as a story. It tries to make me think, feel, and look at it from many layers. For me, that made the reading experience much more meaningful.

A Fresh Way of Looking at Itihāsa

One of the strongest things in this book is how it explains the idea of Itihāsa. I liked the way it tried to show that Rāmāyaṇa is not to be reduced to a simple myth or a dry history book. The book gives space to tradition, philosophy, culture, and logic together. That balance made me feel that the author is not just repeating familiar ideas, but really trying to open a deeper door into the subject.

Philosophy That Makes Me Think

The first part of the book made me pause again and again. It asks questions about history, truth, memory, tradition, and the way we understand the past. I enjoyed this part because it felt thoughtful and bold. It did not rush me. It made me sit with the ideas. I liked how it connected Rāmāyaṇa with bigger questions about dharma, knowledge, and the human way of seeing the world. This gave the book a strong intellectual base.

History, Tradition, and Continuity

What I found very interesting was the way the book connects the Rāmāyaṇa with history, genealogy, geography, and cultural continuity. It brings in a lot of examples and references to show that the epic is not standing alone in isolation. For me, this was one of the most engaging parts of the book because it made the world of Rāmāyaṇa feel large, connected, and alive across time. It gave the book a sense of depth that I really appreciated.

A Beautiful Reading of Myth and Meaning

I also liked the way the book talks about myth. It does not use the word in a careless way. Instead, it tries to show how myth can carry meaning, memory, and cultural truth. This made the reading feel richer. I felt that the book was helping me understand not only the text of Rāmāyaṇa, but also the spirit behind it. That is something I valued a lot while reading.

The Retelling Feels Literary and Emotional

The later part of the book, where the story of Śrī Rāma begins to unfold, felt very beautiful to me. It is not written like a plain summary. It feels poetic, emotional, and alive. The language carries a special rhythm, and I could feel the sadness, longing, dharma, and dignity inside the story. I especially liked that it did not make the epic feel distant. It brought the story close to my heart.

The Language Has Its Own Charm

The writing style is one of the biggest reasons this book stayed with me. It is not ordinary modern prose, and that is what gives it charm. It has a literary touch, a little old world feeling, and a thoughtful rhythm. At times it felt grand, at times reflective, and at times deeply emotional. I personally enjoyed this style because it matched the seriousness of the subject and gave the book its own identity.

A Book That Respects Rāmāyaṇa

What I felt throughout the book is that it has deep respect for the Rāmāyaṇa. It does not treat it casually. It approaches the epic with seriousness, devotion, and thought. I liked that very much. The book seems to want me to look again, understand better, and not judge too quickly. That made the reading experience feel sincere and enriching.

My Final Feeling

Overall, this book gave me a deep and memorable reading experience. It is thoughtful, literary, and full of meaning. I liked how it moved between philosophy, history, culture, and story without losing its core purpose. For me, it felt like a book that does not just tell the Rāmāyaṇa, but invites me to think about it in a more alive and meaningful way. I finished it with a stronger feeling of connection to the epic and with a lot to reflect on.