I'm looking for book reviews from the community for my recently published first novel, Stumbling into Life . The book is a work of fiction falling within the inspirational/personal growth category. If the below description interests you, please do go ahead and grab a copy here- the Kindle copy is available for FREE today, 18 December (until midnight Pacific time).
If you could drop me a review on Amazon I'd be extremely grateful!
Maya doesn't have it all. But she has quite a bit of it.
As a 30-something woman who worked in investment banking in London before the Great Recession and is now living in Paris, she has a sufficiently charmed, globe-trotting life. But something seems amiss.
Sitting in her 19th century Parisian apartment, she begins to ask the big questions of life. But surely, her late night whinging is not some form of spiritual awakening? To find out the answer to her questions, she embarks on a search for truth, a journey that leads her to yoga and meditation classes in Paris, a New York museum, the Californian redwood forest, a yoga retreat in the French country, a south Indian ashram and finally to the Himalayas.
What will Maya discover? Is it really true, what the spiritual masters say about another way to live? Or was she a fool to give up on a life of haute couture and foie gras? What happens when you stop chasing dreams and end up stumbling into life?
I'm looking for book reviews from the community for my recently published first novel, Stumbling into Life . The book is a work of fiction falling within the inspirational/personal growth category. If the below description interests you, please do go ahead and grab a copy here- the Kindle copy is available for FREE today, 18 December (until midnight Pacific time).
If you could drop me a review on Amazon I'd be extremely grateful!
You can also check out more of my writings on https://stumblingintolife.com/blog/
Many thanks,
Shruti
Stumbling into Life
Maya doesn't have it all. But she has quite a bit of it.
As a 30-something woman who worked in investment banking in London before the Great Recession and is now living in Paris, she has a sufficiently charmed, globe-trotting life. But something seems amiss.
Sitting in her 19th century Parisian apartment, she begins to ask the big questions of life. But surely, her late night whinging is not some form of spiritual awakening? To find out the answer to her questions, she embarks on a search for truth, a journey that leads her to yoga and meditation classes in Paris, a New York museum, the Californian redwood forest, a yoga retreat in the French country, a south Indian ashram and finally to the Himalayas.
What will Maya discover? Is it really true, what the spiritual masters say about another way to live? Or was she a fool to give up on a life of haute couture and foie gras? What happens when you stop chasing dreams and end up stumbling into life?