Motivational books

YOU CAN WIN - SHIV KHERA


This may be the conventional self-help book, but Shiv Khera has managed to reach out to everyone with his simplistic yet powerful ideas. The good thing about this book is that the language is kept simple and to the point making it easier to understand. You Can Win, focuses on achieving success through personal growth and a positive attitude.
The most emotionally strong quote from this book is: “Be strong so that nothing can disturb your peace of mind.”

THE KITE RUNNER- KHALID HOSSEINI

A book is about the life, without embellishment. This is among those books that change views on certain aspects of life. A striking, heartbreaking tragedy of friendship between the two boys, as it turned out later – brothers. The plot, in its essence, if it was written by a middle-class writer, would seem like an old Indian movie or Santa Barbara. But under the pen of Khaled everything is different, he skillfully makes each of your cells tremble, belch out all his fears and hidden thoughts, all the injuries of childhood that he would like to change – but there is neither strength nor possibility. Amir, the main character, turned out and confessed first of all to himself in his cowardice and treachery, and also managed to change not only his own destiny but also the fate of Sohrab.
The book makes you reconsider your actions, your attitude to life and the loved ones.

LIFE OF PI- YANN MARTEL
Yann Martel’s Life of Pi is the story of a young man who survives a harrowing shipwreck and months in a lifeboat with a large Bengal tiger named Richard Parker. Such components as an Indian boy with a tiger in the Pacific Ocean are assumed either a multi-page longing or Bollywood finding a brother of the boy in the ocean, the brother of Tiger and an illegitimate son of a cousin of a tiger’s sister. Well, what else can you squeeze out of such kind of plot? The amazingly easy language of the author, a subtle sense of humor, graceful subversion of deviations – this is already enough to read. Well, the story itself is a super illustration of how a person who survived the most powerful existential crisis (and what else to do for 7 months, hanging out in the Pacific?!) Is triggered by a psychological defense.

No comments:

Post a Comment