Tag: Self-help

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Book Review: Once Again Love by Sarita Mathur

When I chose to read this book Once Again Love, I had no idea what I was going in for. This was the debut book for the author Sarita Mathur and I cannot help but say that I was fascinated. But that aside, this was a book filled with hauntingly beautiful poems.

Book Review: Moment of Signal by Sreedhar Bevara

What I love most about this book, Moment of Signal, is the zero nonsense it allows. I read this when I really needed a kick up the backside, and it did that. The book builds on the premise that the circumstances affect us not as much by how good/bad they are but how we react to them.

Author Interview: Preeti Pathak | The Author of Enrich Life

After a soul-filling debut book, 25 Essentials To Happy Living, Preeti Pathak brings to you another soul-stirring book, Enrich Life to uplift and harmonize your life by your own self. The Book encourages all readers, to question the how, where, why what of SELF for holistic wellness.

Best Self-Help Books Of All Time you need to read during downtime

We have gathered the best self help books of the last several decades, from perennial bestsellers to new releases. If you’re looking for motivation to change your life or your outlook, check out our inspiring list of the most influential and best self help books of all time.

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Birds of a Feather by Kate Stewart

A spoiler-free, deeply felt review of Birds of a Feather by Kate Stewart. Tyler finally cracks open, Larissa refuses to be reduced, and the Ravenhood world gets darker, slower, and more honest than ever before.

Dolly All the Time by Annabel Monaghan

An honest, spoiler-free review of Dolly All the Time by Annabel Monaghan. A thirty-nine-year-old single mother strikes a pretend-girlfriend bargain with a Rhode Island heir, and finds something harder to hand back at summer's end.

Phoebe Berman’s Gonna Lose It by Brooke Averick

A spoiler-free, deeply read review of Brooke Averick's debut Phoebe Berman's Gonna Lose It. Honest praise for its sharp anxiety writing, ensemble friend group, and pre-K classroom humor, plus the patches where the pacing falters. Comparable reads included.

The Midnight Train by Matt Haig

Matt Haig's The Midnight Train follows an ageing bookseller on a ghostly steam-engine ride through his own life. A warm, spoiler-free review of the second Midnight World novel, after The Midnight Library.

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