Review of Bengal Matters: The Doctrine of PM Modi by Anirban Ganguly & Subham Mondal


Rating: 5/5

For me, this book makes Bengal feel much bigger than just a political map on India’s side. It treats the state as something deeply tied to India’s growth story, its memory, and its civilizational confidence. I liked that the book does not look at Bengal in a small or casual way. It keeps returning to one strong idea: Bengal matters, and it matters in a serious national sense.

What the book is trying to say

What stayed with me most is the book’s central argument. It presents the Modi-led government’s approach as a policy-driven framework meant to restore West Bengal’s place in India’s future. It speaks about a shift since 2014 from negative politics to development-focused thinking, and it connects that shift with Bengal’s icons, institutions, culture, youth, women, farmers, marginalised communities, and intellectual life. That gave the book a very clear direction, and I felt the message came through strongly.

The way it speaks about Bengal’s identity

I really liked how the book keeps Bengal’s identity at the center. It talks about decolonising public memory, honouring figures like Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose and Sri Aurobindo, and giving Bengali language a more respected place by mentioning its classical status. To me, this made the book feel rooted and purposeful. It was not just talking about governance in a dry way. It was also talking about pride, memory, and belonging.

Development, not just slogans

Another thing I appreciated was the focus on real change instead of only loud political talk. The book brings in connectivity, transportation, infrastructure, and economic policy as part of the discussion, and it presents these as part of Bengal’s changing development path. That made the reading feel focused and practical. I found this especially strong because the book keeps tying ideas back to how they affect the state in the real world.

The tone and structure

The book feels analytical and serious, but still readable. Since it is a 152-page paperback from Bluoneink and placed in categories like Polity & Economics and National Security and Awareness, it comes across as a compact book with a clear political purpose rather than a long academic volume. For me, that worked well because the book stayed direct and did not get lost in unnecessary detours.

My overall feeling after reading

By the end, I felt that this book is strongly committed to its message and confident in the case it makes. It sees Bengal as central to a larger vision of a Viksit Bharat, and it keeps pushing that idea with conviction. I personally found that very engaging, because the book speaks with clarity and purpose. It knows what it wants to say, and it says it without hesitation. 

Review of The Literary Genius of the Bhagavad Gita by Pariksith Singh


Rating: 5/5

When I picked up The Literary Genius of the Bhagavad Gita by Pariksith Singh, I felt like I was opening the Gita from a completely new angle. I have read the Gita before, so I already knew its spiritual power, but this book made me pause and look at its beauty as a piece of literature too. What I really liked is that it does not treat the Gita only as a sacred text. It looks closely at its literary quality, its structure, and the way its chapters and shlokas work together so beautifully.

The Beauty of the Writing

One thing that stood out to me was how strongly the book focuses on the design of the Gita itself. The idea that the Gita has a special literary form, with its own rhythm, tropes, and flow, felt very powerful to me. I liked how the book brings out the thought that the message of the Gita is not separate from the way it is written. The form and the meaning seem to move together, and that made me appreciate the Gita even more.

A New Lens on an Old Wisdom

What I enjoyed most was the fresh perspective. The book shows how the Gita can be read as literature, and that made the whole experience feel richer for me. It talks about dharma, yoga, yudha, and karma in a way that feels alive, almost like a real teacher guiding a student. That approach made the Gita feel very human to me, while still keeping its depth fully intact.

Indian Thought and Literary Criticism Together

I also appreciated the way the author brings together Indian and Western ways of looking at beauty and literature. That gave the book a broad and thoughtful feel without making it heavy or distant. For me, this made the reading experience very engaging because it respected tradition while also offering a fresh style of literary analysis. It felt like a thoughtful bridge between reverence and criticism, and that was one of the strongest parts of the book for me.

Why This Book Stayed With Me

This is the kind of book that stays in my mind after I finish it. It deepened my respect for the Bhagavad Gita, not just as a spiritual guide but also as a masterfully crafted text. I loved how it made me see familiar verses with new eyes. Since I already value the Gita deeply, this book felt especially meaningful to me because it added another layer of appreciation without taking anything away from the original beauty of the text.

Final Thought

Overall, this was a deeply satisfying read for me. I loved the way it honored the Bhagavad Gita and revealed the literary brilliance hidden in plain sight. It is thoughtful, beautiful, and eye-opening, and for someone who already loves the Gita, this book feels like a very special companion.