Review of One at a Time: Increase Possibilities by Dr Deepak K Tibrewal MBBS MF (HOM) London


Rating: 5/5

This book felt like a practical health guide, but in a very simple and friendly way. What I liked most is that it does not try to overwhelm the reader with too many heavy ideas at once. It keeps coming back to one clear message: small changes, done steadily, can improve health in a real way. The book also brings in ideas like Woxy walking, time restricted feeding, and the importance of healthy aging, so it feels focused on everyday life and not just theory.

The Main Idea That Stayed With Me

The biggest strength of the book is its “one at a time” approach. That idea is very easy to connect with because most people struggle when they try to change everything together. Here, the author makes the case for building one good habit first and letting that grow naturally into a better lifestyle. I found that thought very sensible and very human, because it matches how real change usually happens.

How the Book Talks About Health

The book covers a wide range of important health concerns like blood pressure, diabetes, menopause, PCOS, fatty liver, dementia, heart disease, and cancer, but it does so without making the reader feel lost. Instead of sounding dry or technical, it tries to turn those topics into understandable, useful advice. That made the book feel more approachable to me, especially because it connects health with things people actually deal with in daily life.

What I Liked Most

I liked the way the book moves beyond just disease and treatment and also talks about habits, relationships, and the quality of life. The part that stood out to me is how it values good relationships and friendships, and not just money or popularity. It also talks about procedural memory, which gives the whole book a more practical feel because it shows how habits can become easier when they are repeated properly. That mix of health and life lessons made the book feel broader than a usual wellness book.

The Writing Style

The writing is one of the easier parts of the book to appreciate. It stays simple, direct, and readable, which makes the ideas comfortable to absorb. I never felt like the book was trying to sound too academic or too polished. It feels written for ordinary readers who just want clear guidance and useful direction, and that worked well for me.

The Small Part I Would Mention

A few places felt a little more detailed than I personally needed, but that did not disturb the overall reading experience. In a book like this, a little extra explanation can actually help because the subject itself is serious and wide. Even then, the core message always remained clear, and that was the main thing that mattered to me.

My Overall Feeling

By the end, I felt that this book is really about building a better life through small, meaningful steps. It is thoughtful, practical, and easy to connect with. The focus on walking, good habits, healthy aging, and long-term well-being gives it a real purpose, and the book stays close to that purpose throughout. For me, it was a useful and reassuring read because it reminds us that progress does not always need to be dramatic. Sometimes, one small step at a time is enough to begin with.

Review of Marketing Chronicles by Nimish Dwivedi


Rating: 5/5

Marketing Chronicles felt to me like a practical and honest marketing book, not a heavy textbook. It looks at marketing as a changing world of ideas and habits, moving from the pre-smartphone era to the post-smartphone era, and it explains things through real examples and cases instead of dry theory. It covers topics like branding, media strategies, segmentation, and measurement, so the book never feels stuck in one narrow corner of marketing.

What I Felt While Reading It

What I liked most was that the book speaks in a very real way. It does not try to sound overly smart or complicated. It feels like someone who has seen marketing closely is simply sharing what actually matters. Because of that, I could connect with it easily, and the ideas stayed with me instead of feeling forgotten the next minute. The overall structure also makes it clear that this book is meant for students, practitioners, and anyone who wants to understand marketing in a more practical way.

The Real-World Examples

The examples are one of the strongest parts for me. I liked that the book does not just throw concepts at the reader. It explains ideas through real cases and familiar marketing situations, which makes everything feel more alive. That approach made the book much easier for me to follow, because I was not only reading about marketing in theory, I was seeing how marketing actually works in real life.

The Shift From Old Marketing To New Marketing

One thing that stood out to me was how clearly the book shows the shift in marketing over time. It talks about the older marketing world and then moves into the smartphone era, where consumer attention, brand buzz, and digital behavior became much more important. I felt this part was very interesting because it shows how marketing changed with time, but also how some basic ideas still remain the same.

What Stayed With Me

The parts about branding, segmentation, media strategies, and measurement were especially memorable for me. I liked how the book brought all these ideas together in one place without making them feel complicated. It gave me the feeling that marketing is not just about selling something, but about understanding people, timing, presentation, and the way a brand stays in someone’s mind. That is the kind of understanding this book gives very naturally.

The Writing Style

The writing style felt simple, clean, and easy to read. I never felt lost in jargon or dense explanations. Instead, the book moved in a smooth way and kept the attention on the idea itself. That made it a comfortable read for me, especially because the subject can sometimes become too technical in other books. Here, the tone stayed accessible from start to finish.

Final Thoughts

For me, Marketing Chronicles is a book that teaches marketing in a very human and practical way. It feels grounded, thoughtful, and full of useful observations. I liked that it takes a wide look at marketing while still keeping the language simple and the ideas relatable. It is the kind of book that helps me understand how marketing has changed, why it changed, and what still matters at the core