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India through Japanese Eyes
₹600.00Synopsis
Essays on Japanese understanding of Indian history, civilization. Includes discussion of teaching about India, Japanese views of India in the media and in classroom. Interesting and informative
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Bhanu Bimarsa
₹650.00नेपाली भाषाले इतिवृत्तप्रधान अभिलेख र वांगमय युग पार गरी मानवीय हार्दिक भावनाको रम्य ललित सृजनात्मक भाषिक अभिव्येक्ति तर्फ़ को उन्मुखता लिइरहेको र नेपाली साहित्यको उषाकाल प्रमुदित भइरहेको परिप्रेक्क्ष्यमा भानुभक्त आचार्यले सम्पूर्ण नेपालीहरुको निम्ति हृदयासंवेध साहित्यको रचना सरल, सरस र चोखो झर्रो नेपाली भाषामा गरि थाहै नपाई त्यस्तो महान गौरवमय कार्य गर्न पुगे, जसले उनलाई नेपाली साहित्यका आधिकविको प्रतिष्ठाका साथै नेपाली जातीय संस्कृतिक एकताका प्रतीकको भूमिका समेत प्रदान गर्यो। यसरी जीवनमा आफ्ना रुचि र स्वभाव अनुरूप अनि इछ्या र ध्येय अनुरूप गरिएको कुनै पनि सृजनात्मक कार्यले सार्वजनिक भलाईको सर्वकालिक मूल्य पनि प्राप्त गर्दछ। हाम्रा त्यस्तै संस्कृतिक साहित्यिक परम्पराका अटल आस्था एवम मूल्यका केन्द्र राष्ट्रिय विभूति अधिकवि भानुभक्त आचार्य हुन्।
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How Emotions are Made
₹650.00In “How Emotions Are Made,” Lisa Feldman Barrett presents a revolutionary theory that emotions are not innate or universal, but rather constructed by the brain based on past experiences, culture, and context. Through a blend of neuroscience, psychology, and philosophy, Barrett reveals how our brains use prediction and simulation to create emotional experiences, challenging traditional views and offering a more nuanced understanding of emotions.
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A Prison Diary Hell
₹650.00“The fluorescent lights overhead cast an unforgiving glare on the cold, grey walls of my cell. The sound of clanging doors and muffled voices echoes through the corridors, a constant reminder of the harsh reality of life behind bars. As I lie on my narrow bunk, I struggle to reconcile the world I once knew with the one I’m now forced to inhabit. The days blend together in an endless blur of monotony, each one a challenge to survive, both physically and mentally.”
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This is Going to Hurt
₹650.00In “This Is Going to Hurt,” Adam Kay’s candid and humorous diaries reveal the raw reality of life as a junior doctor in the NHS. With unflinching honesty, Kay shares the highs and lows of his time working in obstetrics and gynecology, from delivering babies to dealing with bodily fluids and bureaucratic red tape. His writing is both laugh-out-loud funny and heartbreakingly poignant, offering a unique glimpse into the challenges and rewards of working in healthcare.
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The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat
₹650.00“The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat” by Oliver Sacks is a captivating collection of real-life neurological case studies that explore the mysteries of the human brain. In this book, Sacks presents unusual and often baffling conditions through deeply human stories, blending science with empathy. The title case features a man with visual agnosia who can see objects but cannot recognize them, famously mistaking his wife for a hat. Throughout the book, Sacks introduces patients with memory loss, language difficulties, tics, hallucinations, and savant abilities, showing how such conditions shape their lives and identities. More than just medical cases, these stories reveal the resilience and uniqueness of the human mind, reminding readers that behind every disorder is a person with their own experiences, struggles, and humanity.
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An Unquiet Mind a memoir of Moods and Madness
₹650.00“An Unquiet Mind” by Kay Redfield Jamison is a powerful memoir that offers a deeply personal look into the author’s life with bipolar disorder. As both a clinical psychologist and a patient, Jamison provides a rare dual perspective—she has treated people with mental illness and has also lived through the emotional extremes of her own condition. The book explores her intense manic episodes, crippling depressions, and the challenges she faced in accepting and managing her illness. With honesty and grace, she discusses the impact of bipolar disorder on her relationships, career, and self-identity. Despite the chaos it brought, Jamison also reflects on how the illness contributed to her passion, energy, and creativity. “An Unquiet Mind” is not only a memoir of survival and acceptance but also a call to reduce the stigma surrounding mental illness, offering hope and understanding to those who suffer and those who love them.
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Attached
₹650.00Attached: The New Science of Adult Attachment and How It Can Help You Find – and Keep – Love by Dr. Amir Levine (co‑written with Rachel Heller) is a clear, approachable guide to using attachment theory to understand—and improve—your romantic relationships. Drawing from decades of psychological research, the authors explain how childhood experiences shape three primary adult attachment styles: secure, anxious, and avoidant . By helping readers identify their own and their partner’s attachment style, the book demystifies why we act the way we do in relationships and reveals how different pairings—especially the anxious‑avoidant combination—can lead to repeating negative cycles . Packed with real‑life examples and practical exercises, it guides you toward more secure communication, healthier emotional boundaries, and stronger interpersonal connections—proving that no matter your style, understanding it and adapting can transform your love life .
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A Prison Diary volume-iii Heaven
₹650.00A Prison Diary: Heaven by Jeffrey Archer is the third and final volume in his autobiographical trilogy chronicling his time behind bars, thematically structured after Dante’s Divine Comedy. In Heaven, Archer recounts his transfer from a medium‑security facility (HMP Wayland) to the open North Sea Camp in Lincolnshire—where conditions relax enough for prisoners to have private rooms and even work in a local theatre. Despite more freedoms, boredom and institutional dysfunction remain constant foes. A brief return to harsher conditions at HMP Lincoln punctuates the narrative, before Archer’s ultimate release on parole in July 2003 .
Told with a blend of candor, dry humor, and thoughtful social commentary, Heaven offers both reportage on daily prison life and critique of a system under strain. It closes with a reflective manifesto advocating for prison reform and empathy toward inmates .
At roughly 480 pages, Heaven completes Archer’s transformation from newcomer in Hell and intermediate routines in Purgatory, to a near‑parole state in Heaven. Readers find it moving, eye‑opening, and ultimately hopeful, if sobering.
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India through Japanese Eyes
₹600.00Synopsis
Essays on Japanese understanding of Indian history, civilization. Includes discussion of teaching about India, Japanese views of India in the media and in classroom. Interesting and informative
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