Review of Doublespeak: Chronicles of Wit and Wisdom by Navneet Jhamb


Rating: 5/5

When I picked up Doublespeak: Chronicles of Wit and Wisdom I was ready for light humor and instead found something that makes you smile and think in the same beat. It reads like a friend who points out how strange our everyday choices and phrases are, and then nudges you to stare at those oddities for a little longer.

What the book actually is

This is not a single long story. It is a collection of short, bite-sized chronicles—each one a tight little essay that stands on its own. The book’s compact chapters make it perfect for dipping into when you have a few quiet minutes, or for returning to a favorite piece again and again. (The published edition lists it as a short, focused collection with a modest page count.)

The writing and voice

Navneet Jhamb writes with a light, wry tone that keeps things accessible. The voice is conversational, sometimes ironic, and often gently philosophical without getting heavy. I liked that the humour never felt cheap; it felt like a clever mirror held up to everyday language, leadership talk, and the small hypocrisies we accept as normal. That blend of wit and reflection is the book’s main charm.

Design, pacing and extras

The book pairs the short texts with visual elements and a neat layout that helps each piece land. The pacing is quick because the pieces are short, but each one has a small idea or image that lingers after you close the page. That format makes the book feel like a series of small surprises rather than a single journey.

A small, honest critique

If I have to nitpick, a couple of pieces felt like they could have been stretched a bit more. I sometimes wished one or two chronicles dug a little deeper instead of ending on a quick punchline. This is minimal though. Most pieces do exactly what they set out to do: make you chuckle and then think.

Final thought

If you like short, sharp writing that mixes humor with a little wisdom, this is worth a read. It’s easy to carry through a day, and the kind of book you can open at random and come away with a little insight or a smile. Available through major sellers if you want a copy.

Review of Does Rahu Give Spiritual Ethos?: An Argumentative Analysis in Jyotish by Ranjan Pal


Rating: 5/5

I picked up this book curious and came away satisfied. From the first page I felt the author was asking a real, specific question and was determined to answer it properly. The book does not waste time. It goes straight to the point and keeps the focus on whether Rahu can actually give spiritual ethos to a person.

What the book asks

The central question is simple and powerful: can Rahu itself originate spirituality in a natal chart? The author treats this not as folklore or a slogan but as a testable claim. I liked that the whole book hangs on that single question — it makes the reading clear and purposeful.

How the author argues

The author uses horoscope case studies and step by step reasoning rather than vague statements. Each case is used to examine whether Rahu by itself produces spiritual depth, or whether something else is at work. The approach feels investigative — compare, test, and then conclude — and that kept me reading with interest.

The main conclusion

What stayed with me most is the clear conclusion: Rahu does not independently give spiritual ethos. Instead it can highlight, magnify, or help express spiritual tendencies that are already present because of other factors in the chart. In other words, Rahu is a facilitator or amplifier at best, not the original source of spiritual feeling.

Style and clarity

The writing is plain and direct. The author does not use unnecessary big words or long theoretical detours. Complex ideas are broken down into simple steps so I did not feel lost even when the examples were technical. That clarity made the argument persuasive for me.

How it changed my view

Before reading this I had heard many quick takes about Rahu being either purely malefic or magically spiritual. This book made me more careful. It taught me to look for deeper combinations in a chart instead of assigning a single planet all the credit or blame. I now find myself thinking in terms of root causes and supporting factors.

Who will get the most from it

If you are learning Jyotish or practice it and want a focused, evidence oriented take on Rahu, this book is useful. It is not a long textbook or a devotional guide. It is a tight, argumentative essay that asks one question and answers it with examples and logic. For people who like concise, no-nonsense astrology writing, this will feel rewarding.

Final thought

I enjoyed this book because it treats a popular idea with seriousness and discipline. It does not shout or mystify. It looks, tests, and explains. For me it was a clear, helpful read that sharpened how I think about Rahu and spirituality.