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"It was a wonderful experience interacting with you and appreciate the way you have planned and executed the whole publication process within the agreed timelines.”
Subrat SaurabhAuthor of Kuch Woh Pal
What if the most unremarkable man in the village once had the most remarkable heart.
It’s a novel about how generations collide, children growing up too busy swiping to look up, and technology racing faster than time itself. Our postman hero mocks Wi-Fi like it’s a false god everyone kneels to, insists Bluetooth sounds like a gum infection, and says iPhones are just overpriced alarm clocks that come with attitude. He has more
What if the most unremarkable man in the village once had the most remarkable heart.
It’s a novel about how generations collide, children growing up too busy swiping to look up, and technology racing faster than time itself. Our postman hero mocks Wi-Fi like it’s a false god everyone kneels to, insists Bluetooth sounds like a gum infection, and says iPhones are just overpriced alarm clocks that come with attitude. He has more faith in a stamped envelope than in “cloud storage”, because at least letters don’t disappear when the battery dies.
This book is about love, loss, and the quiet, stubborn dignity of ordinary lives, told with equal doses of heartache and sarcasm. At its center is a retired postman who once carried letters across towns, only to realize he never quite received his own share of love until it came too late. What follows is a mix of grumpy humor, tender memories, and the absurdity of a man who still trusts paper more than passwords.
You’ll laugh at his sharp observations, you’ll ache at his quiet loneliness, and you’ll recognize yourself somewhere between the eye-rolls and the tears. At its heart, this isn’t just one man’s story, it’s all of ours: a reminder that love, sarcasm, and dignity can outlive even the noisiest modern madness.
What if the most unremarkable man in the village once had the most remarkable heart.
It’s a novel about how generations collide, children growing up too busy swiping to look up, and technology racing faster than time itself. Our postman hero mocks Wi-Fi like it’s a false god everyone kneels to, insists Bluetooth sounds like a gum infection, and says iPhones are just overpriced alarm clocks that come with attitude. He has more
What if the most unremarkable man in the village once had the most remarkable heart.
It’s a novel about how generations collide, children growing up too busy swiping to look up, and technology racing faster than time itself. Our postman hero mocks Wi-Fi like it’s a false god everyone kneels to, insists Bluetooth sounds like a gum infection, and says iPhones are just overpriced alarm clocks that come with attitude. He has more faith in a stamped envelope than in “cloud storage”, because at least letters don’t disappear when the battery dies.
This book is about love, loss, and the quiet, stubborn dignity of ordinary lives, told with equal doses of heartache and sarcasm. At its center is a retired postman who once carried letters across towns, only to realize he never quite received his own share of love until it came too late. What follows is a mix of grumpy humor, tender memories, and the absurdity of a man who still trusts paper more than passwords.
You’ll laugh at his sharp observations, you’ll ache at his quiet loneliness, and you’ll recognize yourself somewhere between the eye-rolls and the tears. At its heart, this isn’t just one man’s story, it’s all of ours: a reminder that love, sarcasm, and dignity can outlive even the noisiest modern madness.
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