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The Secret of Successful Life

The Secret of Successful Life

This book is dedicated to all the deprived, underprivileged and aimless people who wants to do improvement in their life.

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Pradosh Chandra Mitter

Pradosh Chandra Mitter

Pradosh Chandra Mitter - yes, he is the same person as you imagined, but not with exact characteristics. He is not a detective by profession but solving crime is indeed his passion. His well-known companion Lalu babu is with him.
In this book Pradosh solves three mysteries. Yes, you can definitely say this is a fan fiction.

100

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Letters to a Teacher

Letters to a Teacher

This remarkable book was written for the parents of the Italian poor. But it is about poor everywhere: their anger is the anger of every worker and peasant who sees middle-class children absorbed effortlessly into schools as teacher’s favorites.
Eight young Italian boys from the mountains outside Florence wrote this passionate and eloquent book. It took them a year. Simple and clearly, with some devastating statistical analysis of the Italian education system, they set out to show the ways in which attitudes towards class, behavior, language and subject-matter militates against the poor. They describe too, the reforms they propose, and the methods they use in their own school - the School of Barbiana, started under the guidance of a parish priest and now run entirely by the children.
Letter to a Teacher was a best seller in Italy and has been published subsequently in many languages.

100

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In Kali's Country -Tales from Sunny India

In Kali's Country -Tales from Sunny India

A description of old India in the eye of a foreign woman, the writer herself, Emily Churchill Thompson Sheets. She described tales of Kalighat and other worship places of Goddes Kali in her time in 20th century.

100

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Folk-Tales of Bengal

Folk-Tales of Bengal

As written by the writer himself : "In my Peasant Life in Bengal I make the peasant boy Govinda spend some hours every evening in listening to stories told by an old woman, who was called Sambhu’s mother, and who was the best story-teller in the village. On reading that passage, Captain R. C. Temple, of the Bengal Staff Corps, son of the distinguished Indian administrator Sir Richard Temple, wrote to me to say how interesting it would be to get a collection of those unwritten stories which old women in India recite to little children in the evenings, and to ask whether I could not make such a collection.
So I did that, all the stories were in Bengali, and I translated them into English. "

100

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The complete Sherlock Holmes

The complete Sherlock Holmes

"The complete Sherlock Holmes" contains Arthur Conan Doyle's entire Sherlock Holmes works, including 4 novels, "A Study In Scarlet", "The Sign of the Four", "The Hound of the Baskervilles", "The Valley of Fear" and each of the 56 short stories. Thus this ebook covers all of the contents of the different books published originally i.e. "The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes", "The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes", "The Return of Sherlock Holmes", "His Last Bow" and in "The Case-Book of Sherlock Holmes"

99

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Detective Sexton Blake- Part I

Detective Sexton Blake- Part I

This volume compiles 10 adventures of Sexton Blake, originally published between1908 and 1909, unfortunately it was not possible to get the names of the authors who might have written these stories with surety, so we are not able to add any writer names.

99

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The Mirror and the Shadow - 20 Short Stories

The Mirror and the Shadow - 20 Short Stories

In the sprawling narrative of modern life, there are stories we tell over coffee in bright office cafeterias, and there are stories we whisper in the dark, fearful that saying them aloud might make them true. This anthology is a collection of both.
Bringing together the works of Meheli Malakar and Supratik Sen is an exercise in contrast and convergence. Malakar takes us into the high-rises and the hushed bedrooms of the corporate elite. Her stories, like Lost Souls and Allure of the Corporate Jungle, peel back the glossy veneer of ambition to reveal the profound loneliness of marriages defined by transactions rather than intimacy. She writes of the "corporate jungle" where desires collide with professional reinvention. Her characters are navigating cultural dualities and the shifting expectations of a globalized world.
Conversely, Supratik Sen drags us away from the air-conditioned boardrooms and into the grit of the streets and the silence of forgotten rooms. His narratives, such as A buried story cremated and Crime in the City, are unflinching examinations of honour killings, systemic corruption, and the desperate arithmetic of survival. Sen explores the hidden emotional truths of everyday lives, centering on trauma and the quiet strength of ordinary people facing extraordinary moral crises.
Yet, as you read these stories in sequence, a singular thread emerges: the fragility of human connection. Whether it is a wife grappling with her husband's secret desires in Malakar’s Pain and Pleasure , or a daughter fighting for the dignity of her neurodivergent son in Sen’s Srinika, the struggle is the same. It is the universal fight to be seen, to be understood, and to survive the institutions—marriage, family, the law—that promise to protect us but often fail.
This book does not offer easy answers. It offers the "familiar contradictions of city life: success paired with loneliness, intimacy layered with secrecy". It is a journey through the myriad fragrances of life and the dark corners where we hide our deepest fears.

Detective Sexton Blake- Part II

Detective Sexton Blake- Part II

The character of Sexton Blake was built in England during the late 19th century.
This was elaborated in the first part of this book published by us. This volume compiles 15 adventures of Sexton Blake, originally published between1908 and 1925, unfortunately it was not possible to get the names of the authors who might have written these stories with surety, so we are not able to add any writer names.

99

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Reading the Indus- Sarasvati Script

Reading the Indus- Sarasvati Script

Do you know that 4500-year-old Indus script signs were in use much after the Harappan era, when Indus civilization is believed to have been ended ?Are you aware of the use of Royal monograms of Indus in Maurya, Kushan and Gupta Era and also outside India e.g. Greece?
In this book writer used a different technique to decipher Indus script via phonetic values of basic Indus signs, vowel diacritics ,letters used to mention quantity (number, volume and weight) etc. He has gone through the pottery inscriptions first and tablets thereafter and then discussed about the names and other words found in Indus seals and inscribed on other items.
Out of 4000 inscriptions found so far , of which 2000 are still readable, Rajat was able to read 1,296 Sarasvati Scripts, it took 15 years .
Now all his methods and the journey to decipher the Script has been put into this book.

99

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Ruskin Bond: A Study of Human Emotions

Ruskin Bond: A Study of Human Emotions

Literature challenges one not only to think about ethical conundrums but also makes one sensitive and compassionate. When it blends with euphoria and nostalgia, the integral parts of human mind, it toughens and becomes sturdy. Man loves to live in his past memories to be happy. The experiences form a part of human personality and shape their behaviour pattern.
Nostalgia stores for us our memories which we relish lifelong. Even the lamentable days of past become pleasant. Though we might have ignored some not too pleasant incidents in our bygone days yet somewhat bitter experiences appear to be impressive and attractive. It is aptly said that the panorama of mountains appear beautiful and splendid from a distance. The bitterness of nearness is intolerable. The more we grow in years, the more our past recedes. Distance from the life lived long ago makes it sweet and desirable. Strain and stress of the present becomes frivolous when we slipand relapse into euphoric nostalgia.
The instincts of euphoria and nostalgia have been vividly handled by the legendry writers of all times. They have given various dimensions and definitions to the readers to redeem these human aspects yet many more stones are still unturned. These two instincts in the oeuvre of the legendry writer Ruskin Bond are the anchor points that suggest the scope of study. I have chosen to put forward the very idea about how a man’s body, mind and soul blend with traces of his past memories and support the holistic growth.

THE STRUGGLES OF A BONSAI

THE STRUGGLES OF A BONSAI

Our father’s blood-drenched face and faltering words were a forewarning to us. It was a signal to us to make our future bright through formal education. His broken words were a real eye-opener. Education is essential for dignity, social respect and emancipation from lifelong exploitation. Penury has been his close companion. He blessed us to follow a safer path.
The Struggle of a Bonsai is a humble endeavour to fulfil his last wish, minutes before his death on the Janmashtami festival at Mathura in 1951. Look at the coincidence! The first draft of this story was completed on the Janmashtami Day in 2024, exactly 73 years after his final departure. Had he been formally educated, his life might have been qualitatively different. I can visualize his blood-mixed tears peeping lovingly at me. Inaudible, feeble and incoherent! Each letter of this narrative is a tribute to him. He suffered all his life, but he wanted us to live a respectable life.
I have tried to commune with his spirit that we are a faithful band. If he were to see us, his tears of regret would have been wiped by our sincere efforts. I have failed to procure his photograph, and I don’t know how to draw him. Alive he is in our innermost heart chambers! The story has drawn his superb vision. Dear father, be no more despondent. May you rest in peace!

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