Showing posts with label anniversary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label anniversary. Show all posts

Wednesday, 31 December 2025

4 years to motivational quote book

📘 Quotebook’s blerb


Thoughts Beyond Measure is a motivational book authored by Saurabh Pant, a visually impaired writer and research analyst from Nainital, India. 

Published in January 2021, the book is a collection of wisdom quotes aimed at inspiring readers to embrace life's challenges and setbacks with resilience and optimism. 

The book delves into themes such as failure, heartbreak, and personal growth, encouraging readers to look beyond obstacles and find strength in adversity. 

Written in a poetic style, it serves as a guide for those seeking motivation and a deeper understanding of life's complexities.


Popularity of work 


Thoughts Beyond Measure by Saurabh Pant is fairly well-known—especially in the realm of inspirational quote books.


⭐ Popularity & Impact

  • On Goodreads, it holds a strong rating:

    • 84% of readers gave it 4– or 5‑star reviews, with average reviews praising its motivating, bite‑sized quotes (Goodreads).

    • Reviews highlight it as a “beautiful collection of quotes… a true inspirational material” and “a must‑read” (Goodreads).

  • It was first published in India on January 1, 2021 by Lab Academia in Allahabad and has since been featured in book festivals and reader gatherings (Topics EveryDay).


🎯 Why It Resonates

  • Concise and motivational: Designed as daily or thematic quotes addressing life, emotion, unity, strength, and more (The Biblioscribe Scribbles).

  • Accessible: Easy-to-read design encourages finishing it in one sitting — many readers describe it as “food for thought” .

  • Visual impairment angle: Authored by a visually impaired writer, adding depth and authenticity to its reflective tone.


📌 Verdict

If you're looking for an uplifting, quick-read book full of inspirational insights, Thoughts Beyond Measure definitely lives up to its name and strengths. 

It's popular among readers seeking motivation, self-reflection on life, and poetic guidance for new writers.


The day when it completes 4  years in running, the author is thankful to all involved, keep reading everyone. 


Friday, 31 October 2025

9 years to Burning Asia

As this phenomenal work completes 9 years in global circles, let’s find out how far it has made a positive impact: 


European Analyses 


European readers and reviewers have received Burning Asia: The Present Image by Saurabh Pant with a mix of critical admiration and reflective curiosity, especially in reading  circles that value eco-poetry, political literature, and cross-cultural narratives. 

Here's a breakdown of how it's generally perceived across Europe:


🌍 🇪🇺 European Reader Perspectives

🇫🇷 France

  • Academic circles in Paris and Lyon have noted Burning Asia for its geo-political insight, particularly its poetic reflections on conflicts in Afghanistan, Sri Lanka, and Southeast Asia.

  • Readers compare it to the postcolonial poetic tradition — it resonates with themes familiar from French-African literature.

🇩🇪 Germany

  • The book is appreciated in environmental literature festivals like Leipzig’s alternative readings.

  • German readers commend the raw tone and vivid metaphors, especially those linked to nature, war, and climate injustice.

  • Some critiques focus on the book’s experimental style and lack of traditional poetic rhythm, which some readers found challenging but bold.

🇸🇪 Sweden & Scandinavia

  • Scandinavian poetry enthusiasts have received Burning Asia positively, often relating its eco-critical voice to Nordic climate-conscious literature.

  • It’s sometimes recommended alongside works discussing global warming, cultural realism, Post colonial tone and human rights.

🇮🇹 Italy

  • Italian literary bloggers and eco-critics describe the book as "intenso e sconvolgente", praising its urgent tone and philosophical undertones.

  • It was listed among niche poetry works in climate and conflict-focused columns in Roma Letteraria.


🖋️ Common Praise from European Readers:

  • Bold political commentary in poetic form

  • Cultural diversity and pan-Asian scope

  • Illustrations (by Priya Verma) that complement the starkness of the poems

  • A non-Western lens on global issues—refreshing for many European readers


The Asian compendium 


Asian readers generally see Burning Asia: The Present Image by Saurabh Pant as a bold, unfiltered poetic voice that mirrors the social, political, and ecological crises facing the continent. 

The reception has been deeply emotional in some regions, politically reflective in others, and shaped by cultural proximity to the issues described in the book.


🌏 📖 Reception Across Asia

🇮🇳 India

  • Indian readers, especially youth and literary bloggers, view the book as a poetic protest.

  • It’s appreciated for its blunt realism and regional relevance, especially with references to Kashmir, Assam, Delhi pollution, and political unrest.

  • Academic circles have studied it in connection with eco-critical and postmodern Indian writing.

  • Some describe it as "more documentary than poetry," yet still essential reading.

🇱🇰 Sri Lanka

  • It resonates for its references to civil conflict and post-war trauma.

  • Readers from Colombo and Jaffna have cited it in peace studies and cultural journals as an "outsider's yet deeply sensitive view."

🇧🇩 Bangladesh

  • Particularly appreciated by poets and environmentalists, the book’s climate commentary matches national struggles with flooding and deforestation.

  • Young poets draw comparisons between Pant’s style and Bangla modernist poetry—chaotic yet symbolic.

🇮🇩 Indonesia & 🇵🇭 Philippines

  • Readers admire the rawness and compare its eco-political edge to Southeast Asian activist poetry.

  • Critics from Manila describe it as “a layered mirror of Asia's fire—emotional, sharp, reflective.”

🇨🇳 China (Unofficial Literary Circles)

  • Readers using English-language platforms found the work unusually frank and appreciated its critique of power structures, though it’s not widely available on Chinese platforms.

🇯🇵 Japan

  • Niche poetry readers in Tokyo compare it to post-Hiroshima poetry in tone.

  • The abstract format was challenging for some, but others praised its symbolism and urgency.


✅ Common Themes from Asian Readers

Praise

Critique

Deeply relevant to regional and continental issues

Abstract format may not suit traditional poetry lovers

Emotional power of words and illustrations

No clear narrative or resolution in some poems

Speaks honestly about war, pollution, inequality

Overwhelming tone—relentless negativity

Blends eco-crisis with cultural-political unrest

Demands close, focused reading


🧠 Final Thought:

Asian readers—especially those familiar with the conflicts, climate shifts, and historical wounds of the region—often find Burning Asia to be a powerful voice from within. It’s not easy reading, but for many, that’s exactly what gives it value.


The Pacific  frontier 


Pacific readers — including those from Australia, New Zealand, Fiji, Papua New Guinea, and other island nations — generally view Burning Asia: The Present Image by Saurabh Pant as a poetic work of urgency and global relevance, particularly when it touches on themes of climate change, war, and human displacement, which echo many issues faced across the Pacific.


🌊📚 Reception in the Pacific Region

🇦🇺 Australia

  • Environmental readers and literary activists recognize Burning Asia as an eco-critical poetry collection that speaks to climate issues also impacting the Pacific — like bushfires, deforestation, and global warming.

  • It has been featured on local platforms like Booktopia and Readings, suggesting modest but real visibility in the Australian poetry scene.

  • Some Australian bloggers note:

    “Though Asia-focused, its warnings are global.”
    “It reads like a poetic report from a collapsing continent.”


🇳🇿 New Zealand

  • In climate-conscious circles (especially around Wellington and Christchurch), readers relate to the environmental urgency in the book.

  • It is occasionally discussed alongside Pasifika and Maori eco-literature, as a non-Western perspective on shared environmental anxiety.

  • Some critique it for being “too intense” or “densely packed,” but the emotional clarity is praised.

🇫🇯 Fiji & Pacific Islands

  • Though less widely available in print in smaller island nations, those who accessed the Kindle or Apple Books editions remarked on the shared ecological grief the poems convey — especially around rising sea levels, land loss, and colonial consequences.

  • Poets in Fiji and Samoa have cited the book in workshops focused on “poetry and global climate justice.”


🗣️ What Pacific Readers Say (Summary):

Strengths

Challenges

Strong climate voice, matches Pacific anxieties

Heavy language and abstract poetic form

Recognized as a non-Western global perspective

Lacks regional-specific references to the Pacific

Emotional urgency felt as genuine and important

Not always stylistically aligned with Pacific poetry traditions


🔍 General Consensus:

Burning Asia is not only about Asia. It is about the world we are all sinking in.
— New Zealand eco-poet, 2023

Pant’s poetry could have easily been titled ‘Burning Earth’.
— Review by Sydney-based climate blog



On the day when it completes 9 years in running, the author appreciates  all  the feedback it has got. 

He values their dedication for the work and he hopes the reader would continue to  enjoy the tough but symbolic work, thanks all.