Review of Why Are We This Way: A Guide to Hindu Shastras by Ami Ganatra


Rating: 5/5

I finished Why Are We This Way: A Guide to Hindu Shastras feeling honestly blessed. I have followed Ami Ganatra for a while and this new book felt like a warm, clear light landing on things I had only half understood. It reads like a friendly guide that wants you to remember who you are and why so many of our habits and ideas feel familiar.

What the book actually explains

What I loved most is how the book pulls together the big family of texts. It does not try to make one single rulebook out of everything. Instead it shows the Vedas, Upanishads, Smritis, Puranas, Itihasas, Agamas, and the various darshanas as parts of one living conversation that shaped how people think and live. Ami explains what each kind of text is for and why those differences matter. Reading these chapters made me see how rituals, stories, law texts, and philosophy all work together to shape our habits, festivals, social ideas, and even how we see our purpose in life.

The scholarship and clarity

I could feel the research behind every page. The book reads like someone who has gone back to sources and then sat down to explain them patiently. Nothing felt vague. When an idea comes from a Vedic hymn or a Purana story, Ami points it out and places it so the reader understands where it is coming from. For me this depth made the whole thing trustworthy and calm. It is the kind of book that makes you want to pick up the original passages afterward.

How it shows the scriptures in everyday life

What moved me was how every element is tied to life and not kept in a museum. The chapters show how mantras, yajna, rites, caste ideas, stories of heroes, tantra practices, and everyday customs shaped habits and choices. I found myself pausing many times to think, that yes, this is why our festivals, prayers, and even our household routines feel the way they do. The book helped me see the sacred in ordinary things and understand the deep reasons behind traditions I grew up seeing but never fully understood.

Language and presentation

Ami writes simply and warmly. The tone is welcoming and not distant. Complex ideas are broken into small, clear steps so the reader does not get lost. For someone like me who does not want heavy academic language, this felt perfect. At the same time the writing never talks down to the reader. It respects your intelligence and invites you in.

References and authenticity

In my reading I noticed proper references that point back to scriptures and traditional sources. Where phrases or verses mattered, there are mentions that let you follow up if you want to read the original. That made the book both a starting guide and a gateway to further study. For me this balance of accessible writing plus clear signposts to sources made the book feel honest and useful.

Why this is important for youth and seekers

I believe this book is especially helpful for Gen Z and young people who are drifting away from our heritage. It gives context without moralising, and it offers curiosity instead of judgment. If you are a young person who wants to reconnect with culture without feeling overwhelmed or lectured, this book holds your hand kindly. For spiritual seekers of any age the book is a great must read because it presents tools, stories, and frames that help deepen practice and inquiry.

Personal takeaway

After finishing the book I felt calmer and more rooted. It did not ask me to accept everything blindly. Instead it offered maps and invited me to walk them. I felt grateful to the author for translating large, sometimes confusing material into short, clear explanations that actually feel alive. Reading this felt like coming home a little.

Final note

If you want a gentle but well researched introduction to why we think and live the way we do in our tradition, this book is a beautiful companion. It is readable, joyful, full of facts, and full of heart. I closed it feeling uplifted and quietly more certain about the value of our heritage.

Review of Amritasya Putrah: Children of the Rishis and Immortals by Kanchan Banerjee


Rating: 5/5

I picked up Amritasya Putrah because the subtitle — Children of the Rishis and Immortals — promised something more than a history book: a re-engagement with India’s spiritual texts and a case for recovering a civilisational identity. The book is presented as a wide-ranging attempt to reconnect modern readers with Vedic and Upanishadic wisdom and to show how those ideas can shape personal and national renewal. 

What the book argues

At its heart the author makes a civilisational case: Bharat’s spiritual and social systems once rested on deep principles that have been neglected, and re-learning them can prompt psycho-cultural and social regeneration. The book repeatedly draws on the Vedas, Upanishads and epics to argue for a living tradition — not museum-pieces, but frameworks that can help individuals and society recover a sense of inner dignity and purpose.

How it reads — tone, structure and accessibility

Reading it felt like listening to a thoughtful, at times passionate teacher who wants to bring ancient insight into today’s life. The language is meant for a general audience rather than specialists: it synthesizes scriptural ideas, civilisational history and cultural commentary in an accessible manner. From the promotional and retail descriptions I saw, the book is positioned as a readable civilisational manifesto rather than a technical academic monograph.

Key strengths I found (what worked for me)

What I appreciated most was the ambition of scope — Banerjee attempts to connect metaphysical concepts (for example, the Upanishadic idea of humans as “children of immortality”) to practical cultural concerns like education, history and civic self-understanding. When an author tries to make ancient texts meaningful to contemporary readers, clarity of purpose is crucial; this book keeps returning to a vision of spiritual and cultural revival, which made its argument coherent for me.

Caveats I noted (what readers should keep in mind)

The book’s reach is broad, which is both a strength and a limitation. Because it synthesises many streams — Vedas, Upanishads, epics and civilisational reflection — readers looking for narrowly documented archaeological or peer-reviewed historical debate may need complementary academic sources.

Who I think should read this book

If you are interested in Indian spiritual texts and want a contemporary, passion-driven synthesis that aims to recover cultural confidence, this book will speak directly to you. It’s particularly well suited to readers who want inspiration for translating spiritual ideas into social or civic projects, or who are curious about modern reinterpretations of Vedic and Upanishadic themes.

Final verdict

I close the book feeling intellectually stirred and culturally provoked. Banerjee doesn’t shy away from big claims: he asks readers to consider re-imagining history, identity and social life through the lens of a living Dharma tradition. Whether or not you accept every interpretive leap, reading Amritasya Putrah is a useful exercise in encountering one contemporary attempt to reclaim ancient voices for modern times. For me it worked as a readable, earnest manifesto — one that invites further reading, questioning and, if you’re inclined, action.