Review of Shri Krishn - The Unbounded Hero by Sonu Sharma


Rating: 5/5

I have read many things around Krishna before, but Shri Krishn - The Unbounded Hero felt very different from the beginning. This book does not try to place Krishna on a pedestal where he feels unreachable. Instead, it brings him closer, almost like someone you can understand, observe, and learn from in real life. While reading, I didn’t feel like I was going through mythology or religious text, it felt more like I was understanding a personality that is still relevant in today’s world.

Krishna as a way of living, not just a figure

One thing that stood out to me throughout the book is how Krishna is not shown as just a divine identity, but as a way of living. The book constantly reflects on how Krishna handled situations, people, emotions, and responsibilities. Whether it is his calmness in chaos, his clarity in decision-making, or his ability to stay detached while still being fully involved, everything feels like a lesson. It made me realise that Krishna’s life is not just something to admire, but something to actually apply. The idea of being present in life but not getting consumed by it is something that stayed with me deeply.

The balance between detachment and involvement

A major philosophy that I felt strongly in the book is this balance that Krishna represents. He is fully involved in life, in relationships, in responsibilities, but at the same time, he is not emotionally trapped by outcomes. This concept is very powerful. The book shows how Krishna could take the toughest decisions without losing his inner stability. It made me think about how often we get disturbed by small things because we are too attached to results. This idea of doing your role with full sincerity but without being controlled by the result is something the book brings out beautifully.

Understanding life through Krishna’s roles

Another thing I really liked is how the book explores Krishna through different roles. As a child, there is innocence and joy. As a friend, there is loyalty and connection. As a leader and strategist, there is intelligence and clarity. As a guide, there is wisdom. These roles are not just described, they actually reflect different aspects of life. It shows that one person can carry so many dimensions at once, and that is what makes Krishna “unbounded”. He cannot be defined in just one way, and that is exactly what the book tries to convey.

Simple language, but deep meaning

The best part is that none of this feels heavy while reading. The language is very simple and easy, but the thoughts are deep. Many times I found myself slowing down, not because it was difficult, but because it made me think. It is not one of those books that you just finish and move on. It stays in your mind. Certain ideas keep coming back even after you close the book.

A very calm and reflective reading experience

The overall tone of the book is very शांत and reflective. It doesn’t try to force ideas on you. It simply presents Krishna’s perspective and lets you absorb it in your own way. That makes the experience very personal. It felt like I was not just reading, but also reflecting on my own life while going through it. And that kind of connection is rare.

What I take from this book

After finishing this book, I feel like my understanding of Krishna has become more practical and real. Not just as a divine figure, but as a guide for life. The book made me think about how to stay balanced, how to deal with situations without losing myself, and how to approach life with more clarity. For me, this book is not just about Krishna. It is about understanding life through Krishna.

Review of Live Evil by Alkesh Agarwal


Rating: 5/5

I picked this book because the title felt like a dare. It promises to flip the usual pep talk on its head and teach you to live through the hard stuff instead of running from it. That felt honest and useful to me, so I wanted to see whether the pages actually delivered on that promise.

What the book is about in plain words

At its heart the book says this. The messy, painful parts of building and leading are not roadblocks. They are the workshop where you become stronger. The author lays out stories from his own journey of starting small, failing, rebuilding and scaling, and uses those stories to show how to treat pressure as a skill instead of an enemy. The phrase flip evil into live appears as a simple, repeated idea that ties the whole book together.

How the book is structured and how it reads

The book is written as a mix of personal anecdotes, short reflections, and practical suggestions. It is not heavy theory. The chapters are clear and short enough that I could stop and think after each one without feeling overloaded. The tone is direct. It reads like someone with startup scars talking to you over tea, not like a textbook or a motivational meme. That made it easy for me to stay engaged even when the subject was uncomfortable.

The author's voice and examples

I could tell the author is writing from lived experience. The moments about selling jeans as a teenager and building different businesses feel specific, not generic. Those concrete moments made the advice land better for me. When an idea was supported by a short story from the author’s life, I trusted it more and could imagine trying the suggestion in my own week.

Key lessons that stayed with me

One idea that stuck was to treat pressure like a muscle. The book gives small practices and mental shifts to do this, such as being honest about what is broken, making smaller experiments, and accepting that persistence in chaos is a form of skill. Another useful thing was the repeated reminder that neat plans will change. Expect that, and set up simple routines that keep you moving when the plan falls apart. These felt practical, not preachy.

Practicality and usability

I found many of the suggestions immediately usable. There are short checklists and mindset prompts scattered through the chapters that you can try the next day. I liked that the book rarely got lost in jargon. If you want a workbook level of exercises this is not that. But if you want short, practical nudges that you can test in real life, the book gives enough to start.

What I liked most

What I appreciated most was the blunt honesty. The book does not sugarcoat how lonely or confusing parts of building can be. That honesty makes its advice feel earned. I also liked that the examples were not only of big wins but of small recoveries, which made the lessons feel more realistic.

A very small critique

If I have to point out one small thing it is this. Sometimes I wanted one extra page at the end of a chapter that turned an idea into a three step action I could follow the next morning. A quick checklist or a tiny template would have made some lessons even easier to act on. This is a small wish because the core content is solid.

Who this worked for in my view

This is a book for founders, operators and anyone who wants a realistic mental toolkit for messy projects. It is not for someone looking for quick hacks or guaranteed formulas. It is for people willing to do the uncomfortable work and who want language and small practices to make that work less aimless.

Final thoughts

Reading this felt like a short apprenticeship with a frank mentor. I closed the book with a few ideas I wanted to try the next week, and with a clearer sense that discomfort is part of the process, not proof you are failing. If you are building anything that matters and you want a steady, honest voice to push you, this book will be worth your time.