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Mumbai Marathon by Aarambhh M Singh- Book review

Why Do Women Never Stop Running? A Review of Mumbai Marathon by Aarambhh M Singh This article explores Mumbai Marathon by Aarambhh M Singh as a quiet yet powerful portrait of seven women navigating ambition, grief, and identity. It examines themes, characters, and writing style with honesty, while also questioning its limitations. If you are looking for reflective Indian fiction that lingers in your thoughts, this review will guide your expectations. Have You Ever Felt Like You Cannot Pause, No Matter How Tired You Are? You know that feeling, don’t you? Life keeps moving. Expectations pile up. People assume you will manage. Especially if you are a woman, the world rarely pauses to ask if you need a break. You just keep going. One step, then another. Not because you are strong in a cinematic sense, but because stopping is not an option. That is exactly where Mumbai Marathon meets you. Not at the finish line. Not at victory. But somewhere in the middle of the race, where breath gets he...
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Queen Tara: Kali of Deccan by Medha Deshmukh Bhaskaran

Queen Tara: Kali of Deccan Review – Why This Forgotten Maratha Queen Still Challenges Power and Memory? You are about to read a layered critique of Queen Tara: Kali of Deccan that goes beyond storytelling. It examines how Medha Deshmukh Bhaskaran reconstructs the life of Maharani Tarabai, a strategist who resisted Mughal dominance. The review explores themes of leadership, resilience, forgotten histories, and narrative limitations while grounding the book in real historical events. Have you ever wondered why some of history’s fiercest leaders are quietly forgotten? You’ve read about emperors. You’ve heard about conquests. You probably know the name of Aurangzeb. But what about the woman who stood against him when the Maratha empire was fractured, grieving, and dangerously close to collapse? History has a habit of celebrating power, not persistence. It remembers crowns, not the hands that kept them from falling. That is where this book enters your life. Queen Tara: Kali of Deccan asks...

Spill the Tea: Mahsa — Knowing it’s wrong, doing it anyway

Mahsa reviews a document she knows should not hold, yet she continues adjusting it to keep things moving. In a quiet bedroom conversation, she explains her choices through timing, consequences, and practicality. She never calls it wrong. The narrator does not interrupt. By the end, nothing changes, except how clearly the cost sits in the room. Mahsa sat cross-legged on the bed, close to the wall, as if she had chosen that spot earlier and not changed her mind since. The curtains were half drawn. The room held the late afternoon heat without complaint. She had placed a rectangular box near the pillow. Transparent lid. Inside, neatly arranged savoury snacks. The kind people pick up on the way without thinking too much about it. “I didn’t know what you’d have at home,” she said. I poured tea into two cups and set them on the side table. “There’s always something,” I said. She nodded, like that matched what she expected. For a while, we spoke about small things. The water supply timing had...