Review of Bring Your Own Shark by Navinder Narang


Rating: 5/5

Bring Your Own Shark by Navinder Narang is one of those books that does not just talk about growth in a plain motivational way. It gives growth a very interesting shape through the idea of “sharks.” At first, the title itself feels unique, and after reading the book, I understood why this metaphor works so well. The shark here is not just about danger or fear. It becomes a symbol of pressure, movement, alertness, survival, and the kind of challenge that pushes us to become better. I really liked this concept because it made the whole idea of self-growth feel fresh and different.

The Main Idea Felt Very Powerful

What I loved most about this book is the thought that we should not always wait for life to force us to grow. Many times we become too comfortable, too slow, or too unsure, and then only some outside pressure wakes us up. But this book tells us to bring our own shark, meaning we should create our own push, our own challenge, and our own reason to move forward. That idea stayed with me because it is simple, but also very deep. It made me think about how many times I wait for the right moment, when maybe I should create that moment myself.

The Shark Metaphor Made The Book Stand Out

The use of different sharks for different qualities was something I enjoyed a lot. The book connects sharks with things like speed, clarity, courage, patience, adaptability, and other sides of growth. This made the reading experience more engaging because every shark felt like a lesson in itself. It was not just giving advice randomly. It was showing how different situations need different strengths. Sometimes we need to move fast. Sometimes we need to stay calm. Sometimes we need courage. Sometimes we need patience. This made the book feel practical and not just like normal self-help talk.

Easy To Understand But Still Meaningful

The language of the book is very easy to follow, and that is something I always appreciate in a growth-based book. It does not feel heavy or complicated. The author explains ideas in a way that feels simple, but the message still feels meaningful. I never felt like the book was trying too hard to sound intelligent. Instead, it felt like it was trying to actually help the reader understand themselves better. That made the book comfortable to read, while still giving me many points to think about.

A Good Mix Of Storytelling And Lessons

Another thing I liked is how the book uses storytelling, examples, and exercises to explain its points. It does not feel like a dry lecture. The stories and real-world kind of examples make the ideas easier to connect with. I could understand the lessons better because they were not only told, they were shown through situations and reflections. The exercises also made the book more personal because it asks the reader to think about their own life, their own fears, their own comfort zone, and their own path of growth.

It Made Me Reflect On My Own Growth

While reading this book, I kept thinking about my own habits and the areas where I sometimes stay stuck. The book made me ask myself whether I am actually moving forward or just waiting for life to push me. That personal reflection is what made the book special for me. It is not just a book that I read and closed. It gave me thoughts that stayed in my mind. It made me look at challenges in a different way, not only as problems, but also as something that can bring out a stronger version of me.

Growth With Empathy And Trust

I also liked that the book does not make growth sound harsh or emotionless. It talks about qualities like empathy and trust too, which gives the message a more balanced feeling. Growth is not only about pushing hard, competing, or becoming fearless all the time. Sometimes growth also means understanding people, trusting the process, and having the right emotional strength. This part made the book feel more complete because it showed that becoming better is not only about outer success, but also about inner maturity.

A Book That Feels Useful For Life And Work

This book can connect with both personal and professional life. Whether someone is trying to improve themselves, build confidence, become a better leader, face challenges, or come out of stagnation, the ideas in this book can help. I liked that it does not limit growth to only career or only mindset. It looks at growth as a complete journey. The lessons can be applied in daily life, work, relationships, decision-making, and even in the way we handle fear and pressure.

My Final Thoughts

Overall, Bring Your Own Shark was a very meaningful and enjoyable read for me. I liked the freshness of the concept, the simple writing, the practical lessons, and the way the book keeps pushing the reader to think about their own path. It is not just about becoming successful, but about becoming active in your own growth. The book reminded me that sometimes the thing we fear can become the thing that helps us move. And instead of waiting for life to throw challenges at us, we can choose our own shark, face it, and grow from it.

Review of Waiting for Shiva: Unearthing the Truth of Kashi’s Gyan Vapi by Vikram Sampath


Rating: 5/5

I went into Waiting for Shiva with complete seriousness, because this book does not behave like a soft or cautious history book. It comes forward as a direct attempt to recreate the history, antiquity, and sanctity of Kashi, especially around Vishweshwara or Vishwanath and the Gyan Vapi site. This book is built around Kashi as the abode of Bhagwan Shiva and around the long struggle tied to that sacred place.

The way the book is built

What I respected most is the way the book does not rely on one kind of source. It brings together Hindu Puranas and Kavyas, Buddhist Jatakas and Tripitaka, Jain accounts, Sanskrit Agamas and Nibandhas, Persian chronicles, colonial archives, court documents, gazetteers, survey reports, travel accounts, and modern legal material. That made the book feel heavy, layered, and properly researched, not casual or thrown together. It reads like a work that wants to stand on evidence and not on noise.

The history of Kashi and the temple

For me, the strongest part of the book is the way it traces the long wound of Kashi Vishwanath. The story of rebuilding, loss, and return is handled with force. The book follows the temple’s history through repeated destruction and revival, including the rebuilding at the site by the late 16th century, the destruction again in 1669 under Aurangzeb, and the later rebuilding connected with Ahilyabai Holkar in the 1770s. It also shows how different Shiva shrines in Kashi carried changing importance over time, which made the city feel alive, sacred, and fiercely contested at the same time.

The legal and political struggle

I also found the legal journey of the book very important. It does not stop at old events. It takes the reader through the Lat Bhairo riots of 1809, the British attempt to manage the disputed space, the civil suit of 1936, the post independence handling of the site, the tension around the Places of Worship Act of 1991, the barricading in 1993, and the renewed legal developments that followed in the modern period. Because of that, the book feels very current even while dealing with deep history. It shows how the dispute did not disappear, it simply kept changing form.

What stayed with me

What stayed with me the most is the book’s clear conviction. It speaks of Hindu memory, Hindu resilience, and the long wait for reclaiming a sacred space without hesitation. The closing image around Nandi waiting for Shiva gives the whole book its emotional shape, and that image stayed with me. For me, this is not a book that merely records events. It presents Kashi as a living sacred center, marked by loss, survival, and an unbroken spiritual claim.

Final feeling

By the time I finished it, I felt that Waiting for Shiva had done exactly what it set out to do. It brings Kashi before me not as a distant historical subject, but as a real civilizational place carrying memory, pain, devotion, and legal struggle all at once. The writing feels strong, direct, and deeply committed to the truth it is trying to present, and that is exactly why it left such a lasting mark on me.