theliteratureweekly

The Monk in the Corner Office: An Editorial Perspective

In an era where burnout is increasingly normalized and emotional exhaustion is often masked as ambition, offers a reflective and grounded examination of what it means to succeed without losing one’s inner balance. Rather than positioning emotional intelligence and mindfulness as corporate performance tools, the book treats them as essential human capacities—quietly transformative when applied…

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Talwinder Singh’s The City and the Silence: Where Solitude Learns to Speak

In the relentless rhythm of the modern city—where lives brush past each other without truly meeting—silence often becomes the most eloquent storyteller. Talwinder Singh’s The City and the Silence is a contemplative, soul-searching novel that listens to this quiet voice and transforms it into literature. Rather than chase spectacle or drama, the novel lingers in the emotional…

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Sravya Nalla’s The Girl Between Lines: A Quietly Assured Meditation on Becoming

Writing from the Interstitial Spaces Some books arrive with declarations; others enter with discretion. The Girl Between Lines – A Collection of My Becoming belongs firmly to the latter. In this reflective debut, Sravya Nalla writes from the interstitial spaces of lived experience—between emotion and clarity, vulnerability and resolve, past selves and emerging identities. Composed in lyrical yet conversational…

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The Unheard Housewife: A Voice Reclaimed from the Margins of Everyday Life

A Story That Begins in Silence The Unheard Housewife by Sheenam Khan tells a story that is familiar, yet rarely examined with care. It follows a woman whose life unfolds within routines, expectations, and quiet compromises—until she begins to question the silence she has mistaken for strength. The novel traces her gradual journey from emotional invisibility to self‑discovery….

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Shafqat M. H.’s Between Beeps and Beliefs: Writing Grace from the Margins of Medicine

Listening to What Hospitals Rarely Say Hospitals are often described through statistics, protocols, and outcomes. Between Beeps and Beliefs chooses a different register. It listens to what usually escapes record—the emotional residue of waiting rooms, the moral weight of caregiving, and the fragile hope that lingers between the rhythmic beeps of medical monitors. Blending reflective prose with…

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Anger of a Man ~ Insanity of a Woman: When Jurisprudence Refuses to Hear Women’s Rage

In Anger of a Man ~ Insanity of a Woman, Aryahi Srivastava undertakes a rigorous and unsettling inquiry into one of criminal law’s most guarded assumptions: that reason and neutrality govern judicial decision‑making. Drawing from criminal law, psychoanalysis, and gender studies, the book exposes how the legal system’s apparent rationality is quietly animated by emotion—selectively recognised, unevenly legitimised,…

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Alvin Kalicharan: Reframing Growth Through Discipline and Self‑Inquiry

: Reframing Growth Through Discipline and Self‑Inquiry Alvin Kalicharan approaches leadership—and writing—with a conviction shaped by experience rather than theory: knowledge acquires meaning only when it changes another life. Over more than two decades across banking, consulting, and education, he has worked in environments defined by complexity and consequence. Yet his professional reputation rests not…

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