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Sparks on Wonderland China When a Land Becomes a Mirror: China as a Reflection of the Traveller’s Inner World

Author Name: Dadhiram Basumatary | Format: Paperback | Genre : Travel | Other Details

 "Sparks on Wonderland China" is not an ordinary travelogue. It's a bit of a deep soul-journey,  combining the author's Chinese experience, cultural realization, and philosophy. 

This joint book series  is based on the author's international training and cultural excursion that took place at Hangzhou, Zhejiang University  on those Days 2019. In this, the science, discipline, collective consciousness, and modern lifestyle of China are compared with Indian philosophy, yoga, and nature-linked way of life. 
The author not only describes the country, the city, the five institutions—
how the Buddha  will begin to live the life of man, how to think of society, and how to live in harmony with nature—it raises these questions. 


✨ Highlights of the book:
1.             Comparing and Shining Eastern and Western Civilizations
2.             The Power of Education, Discipline, and Collective Consciousness
3.             Self-Introduction to Travelogue
4.             A New Vision of Home,  Society and Life

This book series  is suitable for students, writers, tourists, educators, research scholars, and those of us  who take life seriously. 

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Dadhiram Basumatary

At the time, I did not know that the journey would follow me home.

Travel often changes us quietly. It enters through the senses—through unfamiliar classrooms, new textures of fabric, shared meals, and conversations that stretch across cultures. That journey expanded my understanding of science, education, and global interconnectedness, but more importantly, it reshaped how I saw my own roots. Standing in China, learning about silk, I began to see my homeland differently—its Eri traditions, its quiet intelligence, its unspoken philosophies.

Yet, it took me six long years to transform that lived experience into a finished book.

Those years taught me something essential about authorship: experience does not become literature immediately. It needs time. It needs silence. It needs a certain inner ripening. Only when memory matures into meaning does an author emerge.

That is when I finally allowed myself to say the word—author.

A travelogue, as many of us know, is a rare literary space. It does not belong to one discipline alone. It allows history, science, geography, philosophy, food, health, economics, humor, poetry, and lived experience to coexist without hierarchy. In a travelogue, the external journey mirrors an inner one. Roads become questions. Landscapes become teachers.

In my work, I have tried to connect the heritage of Eri silk with world culture—linking local wisdom with global narratives. Silk, after all, has always been more than a fabric. It is memory spun into thread. It is labor, ecology, trade, patience, and philosophy woven together. Through silk, I found a language to speak about continuity—how local knowledge converses with the world without losing its soul.

This, perhaps, is what authorship truly is.

An author is not merely someone who writes, but someone who listens long enough for life to speak back. Someone who allows experience to pass through time, reflection, doubt, and courage before becoming words. Someone who understands that writing is not an act of speed, but of sincerity.

My journey to China gave me experiences.
The years that followed gave me authorship.

And in that long interval between travel and text, I learned this quiet truth:
Stories are not written when they happen.
They are written when we are finally ready to understand them.

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