Book of the Year
Atomic Habits Book by James Clear
The Atomic Habits book by James Clear is widely regarded as one of the most influential personal development books of recent times. In Atomic Habits, the author explains how small daily changes can lead to remarkable long-term results. Rather than focusing only on big goals, Atomic Habits by James Clear teaches readers that tiny improvements repeated consistently can transform productivity, health, relationships, and overall success.
By BooksWagon UAEabout 2 hours ago in BookClub
The Book Lost in Time
In the summer of 2025, an unassuming cardboard box arrived at the doors of the National Archives in Washington, D.C. The box was dusty, tape yellowed with age, marked only with an old library catalog number and the faint signature of its donor. Inside, wrapped in layers of paper that had become brittle with time, was a book—a manuscript so remarkable that scholars around the world paused in disbelief. What made it extraordinary was not just its age or condition, but the fact that it had been missing for 43 years.
By Irshad Abbasi about 14 hours ago in BookClub
Lost Islamic History
In recent years, the book Lost Islamic History: Reclaiming Muslim Civilisation from the Past has The book was written by Firas Alkhateeb, an American researcher, educator, and historian who specialises in Islamic history and thought. First published in 2014 in the United Kingdom by Hurst & Co., it has since been republished in expanded editions (including a 2017 revised version) and translated into several languages including Urdu, Turkish, Bengali, and Indonesian.
By Irshad Abbasi about 14 hours ago in BookClub
8 Pirate Fiction Books You Need To Read In 2026 . AI-Generated.
When we think of pirates, our minds conjure images of swashbuckling adventurers, hidden treasures, and uncharted seas. Yet, pirate fiction is much more than eye patches and cutlasses; it’s a genre that blends adventure, morality, and human psychology in a thrilling narrative tapestry. Pirate fiction books transport readers into worlds where freedom clashes with law, loyalty faces betrayal, and the vastness of the ocean mirrors the depths of human ambition.
By Diana Merescabout 17 hours ago in BookClub
7 Books You Absolutely Must Read in 2026. AI-Generated.
In a world overflowing with information and fleeting trends, reading the right books can be a transformative experience. Books are not just vessels of knowledge—they are windows into new perspectives, mirrors reflecting our own experiences, and tools for personal and professional growth. But with millions of titles available, how do we choose which ones deserve our precious time?
By Diana Merescabout 21 hours ago in BookClub
7 Self-Love Books You Must Read in 2026. AI-Generated.
In a world that constantly pushes us to meet external expectations, self-love is no longer a luxury—it is a necessity. Cultivating self-compassion, understanding our worth, and nurturing our inner dialogue are essential for mental well-being, healthy relationships, and personal growth. But where do we start? Books on self-love offer guidance, insight, and practical strategies for developing a stronger, more compassionate relationship with ourselves.
By Diana Merescabout 22 hours ago in BookClub
7 Books That Show You How to Find True Happiness. AI-Generated.
In a world that often equates success with wealth, status, or external achievements, the pursuit of true happiness can feel elusive. Many of us chase fleeting pleasures or temporary milestones, only to find that lasting contentment remains just out of reach. But what if happiness isn’t something to pursue—it’s something to cultivate? Across centuries, thinkers, spiritual leaders, and psychologists have explored the secrets of a fulfilled life, offering insights that are as practical as they are profound.
By Diana Merescabout 22 hours ago in BookClub
7 Books to Help You Discover the Meaning of Life. AI-Generated.
What gives life meaning? Is it success, happiness, relationships, or something deeper that cannot be easily defined? These questions have echoed through centuries, shaping philosophy, religion, psychology, and literature. Yet despite countless answers, the truth remains deeply personal—each of us must discover our own path.
By Diana Merescabout 23 hours ago in BookClub
THE RELIGION OF LITERATURE, THE MISCOMMUNICATION TRILOGY, “The Entropy of Communication, Vol. II”, Part 5
Review-The Religion of Literature Civilisation as Narrative: Literature, Belief, and the Entropy of Meaning The Religion of Literature is a wide-ranging and intellectually ambitious work that examines the role of narrative in shaping modern systems of belief, knowledge, and political legitimacy. Positioned within a broader theoretical framework concerned with the instability of communication, the book explores how language structures social reality through interpretative frameworks that increasingly resemble the symbolic authority once exercised by religion. Rather than approaching literature narrowly as artistic writing, the book expands the concept to include the entire textual infrastructure of modern culture: philosophical argument, political theory, historiography, scientific debate, and public discourse. Within this enlarged conception of literature, the book argues, societies construct the stories through which they understand truth, identity, and power.
By Peter Ayolova day ago in BookClub
POLITICAL LANGUAGE OF ENTROPY, THE MISCOMMUNICATION TRILOGY, “The Entropy of Communication, Vol. II”, part 4
Review-Political Language of Entropy Civilisation and the Entropy of Speech: When Political Language Wears Out Political Language of Entropy is a sweeping intellectual exploration of the gradual degradation of political discourse in modern societies. Situated within a broader theoretical framework that examines communication as a dynamic system subject to historical and structural pressures, the book offers a profound reflection on how language—once the principal medium through which societies organised power, law, and collective identity—can slowly lose its capacity to stabilise meaning. The central thesis is disarmingly simple yet philosophically rich: political language, like any complex symbolic system, is vulnerable to entropy. As words circulate through institutions, media networks, ideological conflicts, and digital platforms, they accumulate layers of competing interpretations until their semantic coherence begins to dissolve.
By Peter Ayolova day ago in BookClub
THE ENTROPY OF COMMUNICATION, THE MISCOMMUNICATION TRILOGY, “The Entropy of Communication, Vol. II”, part 3
Review-The Entropy of Communication Civilisation Against Language: A Review of The Entropy of Communication Modern civilisation prides itself on an unprecedented abundance of communication. Messages travel across continents in seconds, political speeches are instantly translated into global narratives, and statistical graphs promise to transform complex realities into clear visual truths. Yet this immense expansion of communicative capacity has not produced a parallel increase in understanding. Instead, a paradox has emerged: the more language circulates, the more uncertain meaning becomes. The Entropy of Communication confronts this paradox directly and develops a sweeping diagnosis of the crisis of language in contemporary public life.
By Peter Ayolova day ago in BookClub






