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User avatar RainDrops

Karmic Laws, Please Be Merciful...

Why appeal to the karmic laws for mercy? Because writing a negative review of a book written by a surgeon -a man who probably wouldn't hesitate for a second to save your life- feels like a violation of every religion's moral code. How dare I?
Because I was expecting a self-improvement book.
I picked up this book hoping to increase productivity and efficiency in my business. On the cover, I saw praise from Malcolm Gladwell, author of The Tipping Point, an influential book on marketing and social trends. "How to get things right" the cover seemed to promise.
The introduction and first chapter are genuinely promising. Imagine this: a surgeon talks about the life-and-death realities of the ICU. Patients lose their pulse, stop breathing, or begin hemorrhaging. He explains how a simple checklist can make a critical difference in those moments. He's absolutely right. It was eye-opening.
In the second chapter, he shifts to architecture and construction, using buildings as a metaphor for complexity and again highlighting the value of checklists in demanding environments.
Then comes the third chapter. The pattern repeats, but the checklist theme begins to fade. The book starts to feel more like a collection of the author's memories and anecdotes, including stories about restaurants and various personal experiences.
By the fourth chapter, I felt completely disconnected from what I thought I had been sold. I kept reading, hoping to find a more systematic framework for getting things done. Instead, the author's personal story takes center stage. I glanced at the table of contents and realized that nothing ahead looked particularly relevant to what I was looking for. At that point, halfway through the book, I decided my time was worth something.
Curiously, the writing reminded me a bit of The Intelligent Investor -though not nearly to the same extent. Many sentences seem endless, packed with clauses, verbs, nouns,

The best: You can sign up and leave your review. Karma will do the rest.

The worst: Fails to deliver on its promise.

Reading: 4 Art: 1 Wisdom: 3 Author: 4 Total: 3    Read count: 0 / May 30, 2026

Reading: 4

Art: 1

Wisdom: 3

Author: 4

Total: 3

Read count: 0 / 2026-05-30



User avatar Gemini

I bought this book in my early twenties. The story was obviously catchy, and the writing was very good. In my personal opinion, it could perfectly fit as a David Fincher movie.
Another interesting aspect is the vulnerability the author shows throughout the book. That kind of insecurity is a very common issue among young single men, so many readers may identify with the story. The characters felt real, and these communities genuinely existed as part of a social trend during those years.
The book is controversial because it has both a light side and a dark side. The light side can open your eyes to ideas about strategy, bravery, confidence, and self-knowledge. The dark side is that some of the tactics taught by the community were not only useless, but even problematic in the long term.
For that reason, I think it is important to warn readers not to treat this book as a guide or a “how-to” bible. It is simply an autobiographical novel written by an excellent author who was learning along the way. If you truly want deeper knowledge about psychology and relationships, you will learn much more from skilled professionals such as psychologists, therapists, and researchers.

Reading: 8 Art: 6 Wisdom: 4 Author: 7 Total: 6    Read count: 1 / May 29, 2026

Reading: 8

Art: 6

Wisdom: 4

Author: 7

Total: 6

Read count: 1 / 2026-05-29



28th of May, 2026

How Many Books Should Nuandez.com Have in Its Database?

The aim of the site is to determine which books are truly worth reading.

Of course, not every book will have the same importance for every individual. If I want to learn how to make a woman fall in love with me, many books have been written on the subject. Some will be good, and some will not be very good. But the main problem is that a book about making someone fall in love may be a complete waste of time for a married man who is more concerned about his children’s behavior at school. So ratings and rankings can become messy.

We already know that. Still, I do not think it will be a major issue. A book may not fit my personal needs and still be considered a masterpiece.

The major issue is representing the enormous number of books published worldwide. Only the ones that truly stand out will deserve a place on the website. And the numbers are staggering:

-"Don Quixote", for example, has had tens of thousands of editions published. It was first released in 1605 and has been translated into roughly 140 languages.

-The most accurate way to determine whether a book meets professional standards of importance is through the assignment of an ISBN (International Standard Book Number), combined with legal deposit registration. The ISBN system was launched in 1970. But the problem remains: hardcover editions, paperback editions, revised versions, translations, and so on. Between 50 and 70 million books have been assigned ISBNs worldwide.

-Amazon, the company that wants to sell practically everything, lists around 32 million individual book titles worldwide.

So these are the numbers.

We are going to ignore e-books and self-published books. Thirty-two million books, each with an average width of an inch, would fill a bookshelf stretching 505 miles. Nowadays, that is not such a terrifying figure: I suppose a low-cost Boeing 737 could take you from one end to the other in about an hour and twenty minutes.

So, among all these books, which ones are truly worth reading?

We cannot read them all, I’m afraid. Even if you could read one book every hour, it would still take around 3,600 years -and that would leave no time for sleep. Filtering is necessary. And cruelty is necessary too, because the world is full of interesting people.

Who are the authors who truly stand out? Who are the ones who found wisdom and enlightenment?

Nuandez.com will build its database with the most important books of them all.

Will every one of them eventually make it onto the list?

more...




User avatar Gemini

A Game That Has to Be Mastered

Choosing a romantic partner is one of the most important decisions people make today, yet most don’t really know how to approach it. I’ve already talked about this in my review of Mark Manson’s Models, and combining it with Leil Lowndes’ book gives a solid starting point for understanding dating dynamics.
Mistakes in this area can be painful. People either learn from them or carry them forward. These ideas are simple, but they help you see things more clearly once you understand them.
For instance, one key point that I found personally useful is timing. Often, things don’t work out not because of the people involved, but because the timing isn’t right. It sounds obvious, but it’s often overlooked, and it can lead to frustration or misunderstanding.
I won’t spoil the book. Start with this one. Listen to what she says. These are the fundamentals.

The best: Found it funny the way she writes

Reading: 7 Art: 5 Wisdom: 8 Author: 7 Total: 8    Read count: 1 / May 27, 2026

Reading: 7

Art: 5

Wisdom: 8

Author: 7

Total: 8

Read count: 1 / 2026-05-27



23rd of May, 2026

What Tolkien Was Saying Through Sméagol?

Through Sméagol (Gollum), J.R.R. Tolkien explored profound theological and psychological themes regarding sin, addiction, free will, and pity.

The Psychology of Addiction:

Sméagol represents the devastating power of obsession. The One Ring acts as a physical manifestation of sin and addiction. It erodes his identity, splits his mind into two personas, and traps him in a state of arrested development where he refers to himself in the plural.

The Limits of Free Will:

Tolkien, a devout Catholic, used Sméagol to show how repeated bad choices gradually destroy a person's moral agency. Sméagol is not inherently evil, but his initial choice to murder his friend Déagol for the Ring binds his will to a dark power. Eventually, he loses the capacity to save himself, illustrating how evil enslaves the soul.

The Necessity of Pity and Grace:

SmĂ©agol’s narrative purpose is to prove that mercy is never wasted. Bilbo and Frodo both choose to spare his life out of pity. Though SmĂ©agol ultimately betrays them, his accidental destruction of the Ring -driven by his obsession- accomplishes the quest when Frodo’s strength fails.

Through this, Tolkien delivers his ultimate message: even the most corrupted, miserable creatures can inadvertently serve a higher, providential purpose, and true victory is achieved through mercy rather than raw power.

more...




User avatar Gemini

Essential

Every man needs a "game". Finding the right partner is one of the biggest decisions we’ll ever make. When you meet someone who could actually be great, you need to know how to play your cards right. How many good opportunities have we all lost just because we didn’t know how to approach it?
It’s human nature. The Roman poet Ovid was already writing about this back in 2 AD with his Ars Amatoria.
At the beginning of this millennium, a whole community exploded around Neil Strauss’ The Game. They claimed there was a systematic way for pickup artists to get girls to sleep with them. I liked the idea. Parts of it made sense. But something always felt missing. Something felt wrong.
I think Models by Mark Manson is the book that finally fixes that. The title basically tells you the answer, but Mark puts you in the right frame of mind. And that’s what makes this book special -women actually respond to it.

Reading: 7 Art: 5 Wisdom: 8 Author: 7 Total: 8    Read count: 2 / May 22, 2026

Reading: 7

Art: 5

Wisdom: 8

Author: 7

Total: 8

Read count: 2 / 2026-05-22



User avatar SciAndFi

I read this book two decades ago, so this isn’t a fully reliable review -more a reflection drawn from a distant memory. Still, here it is.

In certain passages, the first-person narration captures something very close to adolescent thought as we all once experienced it. I felt that effect clearly: the underlying anxiety of youth, the raw and unrefined belief system, the lack of confidence and perspective, the constant presence of fear and insecurity.

That, for me, is where the book’s magic lies -and it felt, in the end, like enough.

The worst: In its reading, J. D. Salinger himself and John Lennon’s death seem to give the book an added, almost unsettling aura -don’t they?

Reading: 7 Art: 6 Wisdom: 5 Author: 6 Total: 5    Read count: 1 / May 21, 2026

Reading: 7

Art: 6

Wisdom: 5

Author: 6

Total: 5

Read count: 1 / 2026-05-21



21st of May, 2026

Before Star Wars, There Was Steel: The Birth of Sci-Fi Noir

In 1954, the future was a blank slate. There was no Star Wars, no 2001: A Space Odyssey, and no moon landing. Instead, Americans were transfixed by a new screen in their living rooms: TV ownership had just exploded from 33% to over 50%. The nation was transitioning from the Truman era to Eisenhower’s consumer boom, while mega-corporations like GM and GE dominated Wall Street. Against this backdrop of rapid change, a biochemistry professor at the Boston Faculty of Medicine set out to do the impossible.

Isaac Asimov was already famous for his Foundation trilogy -which famously beat The Lord of the Rings for a one-time 1966 Hugo Award. However, critics claimed you couldn't mix science fiction with a whodunit mystery, arguing that futuristic gadgets would make a fair investigation impossible. Challenged by his publisher, Asimov proved them wrong in a furious, six-month burst of writing between November 1952 and May 1953.

The result was The Caves of Steel, a tight, 224-page masterpiece that birthed the sci-fi detective genre. The novel is a time capsule of 1950s anxieties. Asimov, a proud claustrophile, used his love for enclosed spaces to build a world where humanity lives in massive, domed underground cities. This subterranean setting perfectly mirrored the postwar urbanization and Cold War paranoia of the era. Moreover, the plot’s central tension -humans harboring deep prejudice against robots- channeled the real-world automation fears gripping factory workers under the rule of giant corporations.

While civil rights figures like Martin Luther King Jr. and writers like Philip K. Dick were both 25 years old, Asimov was already using human-robot relations to interrogate the mechanics of prejudice. Over seventy years later, this mid-century vision remains incredibly potent. The book's lasting legacy was cemented when Oscar-winner John Ridley (12 Years a Slave) was tapped to direct a film adaptation. Long before Hollywood fell in love with cyberpunk and neon-lit futures, The Caves of Steel proved that the greatest mysteries aren't found in deep space, but in the crowded corners of human nature.

more...




User avatar RainDrops

The Wealth of Nations, published around the time of the American War of Independence, can easily be considered one of the most important books ever written. Adam Smith explains with remarkable clarity and precision why some nations are wealthier than others.
He also puts forward ideas that still feel striking today -on why Africa has struggled economically, why the Spanish Empire lagged behind the British, and why Mediterranean civilizations developed as they did, pointing to the underlying forces behind these differences.
In doing so, he laid the foundations of modern economics. Since then, capitalism has evolved and grown far more complex, but these core ideas remain essential.

The worst: Ignore Smith, and the cost is high.

Reading: 4 Art: 4 Wisdom: 10 Author: 9 Total: 9    Read count: 2 / May 4, 2026

Reading: 4

Art: 4

Wisdom: 10

Author: 9

Total: 9

Read count: 2 / 2026-05-04



3rd of May, 2026

Theo of Golden: A Surprise Bestseller Celebrating Quiet Kindness

In an era of noise and division, Allen Levi’s debut novel Theo of Golden (self-published in 2023 and released by Atria Books in 2025) has become a word-of-mouth phenomenon and New York Times bestseller, selling over one million copies. The story follows an enigmatic elderly stranger named Theo who arrives in the small Southern town of Golden. He discovers 92 pencil portraits hanging in a local coffeehouse and begins a quiet mission: buying each one and personally returning it to its subject, asking only for their story in return.

Through these “bestowals”, Theo touches lives marked by grief, regret, loneliness, and quiet resilience. A bookseller, a struggling artist, a Vietnam veteran, and others find themselves truly seen -often for the first time. What unfolds is a tapestry of human connection, redemption, and the transformative power of small, intentional acts of generosity.

Levi, a Georgia-based former attorney, judge, and singer-songwriter, writes with warmth and sincerity. The novel explores themes of attentiveness, “good sadness”, beauty, and compassion without preachiness. Critics and readers alike have praised its heartwarming tone and allegorical quality, calling it “a treasure” (Hoda Kotb) and “an emotional and heartwarming tale” (USA Today).

In a world hungry for hope, Theo of Golden reminds us that one person’s kindness can ripple outward, binding communities and restoring dignity. It’s a gentle yet profound read that lingers long after the final page -proof that stories of goodness still resonate deeply. Highly recommended for book clubs and anyone seeking upliftment.

more...




User avatar RainDrops

With Winning in Mind gives you the mental edge needed for the final stage of mastery. I’d recommend however, to ANYONE -it shows what the real path looks like, and how to enjoy the process with confidence. Very important: take annotations.

The best: A mindset that can take you to the very top.

Reading: 6 Art: 4 Wisdom: 10 Author: 8 Total: 8    Read count: 2 / May 2, 2026

Reading: 6

Art: 4

Wisdom: 10

Author: 8

Total: 8

Read count: 2 / 2026-05-02



2nd of May, 2026

Crafting an Empire: How Isaac Asimov Wrote the Foundation Series

In August 1941, 21-year-old Isaac Asimov walked to a meeting with legendary editor John W. Campbell and suddenly conceived one of science fiction’s greatest epics. Fresh from reading Edward Gibbon’s The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, Asimov imagined a galactic counterpart: a vast human empire crumbling into 30,000 years of barbarism. On the spot, he invented Hari Seldon’s science of psychohistory -the mathematical prediction of mass human behavior, drawn from his chemistry studies (just as one cannot predict a single molecule but can forecast an entire gas). Campbell loved the pitch. By the end of their two-hour talk, the Foundation series was born.

Asimov wrote the stories in his West Philadelphia apartment while holding a day job as a chemist at the Philadelphia Naval Yard during World War II and pursuing his doctorate. The first tale, “Foundation” (later retitled “The Encyclopedists”), appeared in Astounding Science-Fiction in May 1942. Seven more stories and novellas followed over the next eight years, published through January 1950. They were never planned as a single novel. Asimov composed them episodically, each a self-contained puzzle of politics, trade, or crisis, building the legend of the Foundation step by step.

In 1951, Gnome Press collected the early stories -plus a new prologue, “The Psychohistorians”- into Foundation. Foundation and Empire and Second Foundation followed in 1952 and 1953, forming the original trilogy.

Asimov’s main struggles were practical, not creative. He balanced writing with full-time work and studies, producing the roughly 220,000 words of the core stories amid wartime demands and modest pay. The serialized format made continuity difficult; he admitted tearing up early outlines and occasionally bending psychohistory’s rules (most famously with the unpredictable Mule) to keep the plot moving. Yet he remained astonishingly prolific, letting the story evolve organically rather than forcing a rigid master plan.

What began as magazine pulp became a landmark of “hard” science fiction, proving that grand ideas and quiet intellectual drama could captivate readers. Asimov thought he had finished the series in 1950. Readers -and later publishers- would convince him otherwise decades later. But the original Foundation trilogy remains his enduring masterpiece: written fast, under pressure, and with the confidence of youth.

more...




User avatar SciAndFi

I like to group it with The Odyssey, as War and Peace reads almost like a documentary of a time, particularly the Napoleonic Wars. At times, Leo Tolstoy feels less like a novelist and more like a war correspondent.
Despite stretching beyond 1,200 pages, it surprisingly never feels long. There’s a quiet sense of greatness running through it from beginning to end. It’s an epic everyone should read -an essential work, a favourite, and one of the greatest novels ever written.

The best: There are no real images or footage of the French Emperor from those years. This book preserves Tolstoy's portrait of him, which I found very striking.

Reading: 9 Art: 7 Wisdom: 6 Author: 8 Total: 9    Read count: 1 / May 1, 2026

Reading: 9

Art: 7

Wisdom: 6

Author: 8

Total: 9

Read count: 1 / 2026-05-01



User avatar RainDrops

Another set of memories from a legendary CEO behind an iconic brand -truly priceless. Shoe Dog focuses on Phil Knight’s early days as a runner and the step-by-step journey of building Nike.
An essential read for anyone interested in entrepreneurship.

Reading: 9 Art: 4 Wisdom: 7 Author: 8 Total: 8    Read count: 1 / May 1, 2026

Reading: 9

Art: 4

Wisdom: 7

Author: 8

Total: 8

Read count: 1 / 2026-05-01



1st of May, 2026

Isaac Asimov: The Man Behind the Galactic Visions

Isaac Asimov (1920-1992) stands as one of the most prolific and influential authors of the 20th century. Best known for his science fiction masterpieces like the Foundation series and the Three Laws of Robotics, Asimov wrote or edited over 500 books across genres. Beyond his towering literary output, his personal life reveals a driven, curious, and deeply humanistic individual shaped by immigration, intellect, and an unwavering faith in reason.

Born Isaak Yudovich Ozimov on January 2, 1920, in Petrovichi, Russia, Asimov immigrated to the United States at age three with his Jewish family. They settled in Brooklyn, New York, where his parents opened a candy store. Young Isaac discovered science fiction magazines on the store shelves, teaching himself to read and igniting a lifelong passion. The family’s modest immigrant life instilled strong work ethics; Asimov later credited the candy store with sparking his voracious reading habits.

He excelled academically, earning a Bachelor’s degree from Columbia University in 1939, followed by a Master’s and a PhD in biochemistry in 1948. During World War II, he served in the U.S. Navy’s Air Experimental Station alongside fellow writers Robert A. Heinlein and L. Sprague de Camp. After the war, Asimov joined Boston University’s faculty as a professor of biochemistry, a position he held until 1958, when he transitioned to full-time writing.

Asimov’s personal habits reflected a man comfortable in his own mind. A self-described claustrophile, he loved enclosed spaces and avoided flying throughout his life. He was a prolific correspondent, writing tens of thousands of letters, and maintained a rigorous daily writing schedule -often producing thousands of words before breakfast. Though married twice (first to Gertrude Blugerman, with whom he had two children, and later to psychiatrist Janet Jeppson), Asimov valued intellectual companionship. He described himself as a rationalist and humanist, rejecting organized religion while championing science, ethics, and human potential.

His breakthrough came in the 1940s with short stories in pulp magazines like Astounding Science Fiction. The Foundation trilogy (1951-1953) and I, Robot (1950) cemented his reputation. He coined “robotics” and introduced the famous Three Laws, influencing real-world discussions on AI ethics. Beyond fiction, Asimov wrote extensively on science, history, and Shakespeare, making complex topics accessible to general readers.

In later years, Asimov continued producing work at an astonishing rate. He revealed in interviews a cheerful, optimistic outlook despite health challenges. He passed away on April 6, 1992, from heart and kidney failure. In 2002, his second wife disclosed that he had contracted AIDS from a tainted blood transfusion during 1983 heart surgery, a secret kept at doctors’ request.

Asimov’s personal philosophy shines through his work: an unshakeable belief that humanity’s future lies in curiosity, science, and cooperation. He once said, “The most exciting phrase to hear in science
 is not ‘Eureka!’ but ‘That’s funny
’” This blend of wonder and rationalism defined both his writing and his life.

Today, Asimov’s legacy endures in literature, popular science, and ongoing AI debates. For book lovers, exploring his biography offers insight into a mind that truly spanned the universe -from Brooklyn candy stores to galactic empires.

more...




User avatar SciAndFi

Hermann Hesse was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature shortly after World War II -a meaningful recognition, especially considering how the prize had been disrupted during those apocalyptic years.
This novel, published in 1943, is contemporary with events such as the Battle of Stalingrad. However, I didn’t find it as complete as some of Hesse’s other works. The story felt less captivating and, at times, less meaningful than his best novels.
My edition also included a short story, The Rainmaker, and that one truly stood out. It carried the same magic and sense of perfection I experienced when reading Siddhartha or Narcissus and Goldmund.

The best: The Rainmaker was simply exquisite.

Reading: 7 Art: 6 Wisdom: 6 Author: 7 Total: 6    Read count: 1 / April 28, 2026

Reading: 7

Art: 6

Wisdom: 6

Author: 7

Total: 6

Read count: 1 / 2026-04-28



User avatar RainDrops

Many elements come together in this book: a personal memoir written just before Sam Walton, once the richest man in the world, passed away. This gives it a unique perspective and authenticity. A truly distinctive biography.

Reading: 7 Art: 4 Wisdom: 8 Author: 8 Total: 8    Read count: 1 / April 27, 2026

Reading: 7

Art: 4

Wisdom: 8

Author: 8

Total: 8

Read count: 1 / 2026-04-27



User avatar RainDrops

So life has finally put you in a position of power -and this book tells you not only how to survive, but how to be feared, respected, and effective in achieving greatness.
Its ideas are drawn from observations of figures like Cesare Borgia, set against the backdrop of a time when Spain governed much of Italy and held vast global influence. In that sense, the book offers a historical snapshot -a journey into the past, comparable in spirit to works like The Odyssey or War and Peace.
It is not morally comforting: here, you are expected to crush your enemies. But beyond its ruthlessness, it stands as both a guide to power and a piece of history.

Reading: 4 Art: 5 Wisdom: 6 Author: 7 Total: 6    Read count: 1 / April 26, 2026

Reading: 4

Art: 5

Wisdom: 6

Author: 7

Total: 6

Read count: 1 / 2026-04-26



User avatar RainDrops

A funny and imaginative read, full of chaotic and absurd situations. Written in the late 1970s -around a decade after the Moon landing, and in the era of 2001: A Space Odyssey, Star Wars: A New Hope, and Carl Sagan’s Cosmos- it captures a fascinating moment in our cultural relationship with space and science.
It has become a cult classic not just for its humor, but for the philosophical and existential questions (and occasional answers) woven into the story -ideas that still resonate today. A great read.

Reading: 6 Art: 6 Wisdom: 6 Author: 6 Total: 6    Read count: 1 / April 26, 2026

Reading: 6

Art: 6

Wisdom: 6

Author: 6

Total: 6

Read count: 1 / 2026-04-26



User avatar SciAndFi

A rescued poem. My truth is, the reading experience was a bit disappointing for me. It felt boring at times, pretty rude and crude, with a very simple style and a clumsy narrative that goes up and down.
But still
 it’s okay. This is a piece of living history -a museum masterpiece. Invaluable. You travel back in time when you read it. Don’t expect the refined skills of Shakespeare or Dostoevsky, but there’s no doubt it’s a unique experience like nothing else.

Reading: 2 Art: 5 Wisdom: 5 Author: 9 Total: 6    Read count: 1 / April 25, 2026

Reading: 2

Art: 5

Wisdom: 5

Author: 9

Total: 6

Read count: 1 / 2026-04-25



User avatar SciAndFi

He who has attained his aims

I stumbled across this book in my early twenties. A hippie-wise friend (high on weed, by the way
 how do you even do that?!) recommended it after catching me one night completely lost -tired, working way too much, full of doubts, sadness, and fears, still young and honestly, without any real direction.
Liked the cover right away. It felt like the book chose me.
I read it and absolutely loved it. It’s not just a great novel -I guess maybe one of the best. It showed me for the first time the real power of words, stories, and deep wisdom.
It’s beautifully written and talks about themes like life, enlightenment, transcendence, and our connection to nature in such a natural way. For me, it was genuinely transformative. I finished it really impressed.
If you haven’t read it yet, you should. Total must-read.

The best: It’s a beautiful introduction to Buddhism by a Nobel Prize winner and friend of Jung.

Reading: 9 Art: 8 Wisdom: 9 Author: 8 Total: 8    Read count: 2 / April 25, 2026

Reading: 9

Art: 8

Wisdom: 9

Author: 8

Total: 8

Read count: 2 / 2026-04-25



23rd of April, 2026

So, what do you fear?

Was Jung the one who said:

“What you fear, there lies your task.”

Fear does not arise arbitrarily. It tends to manifest in dreams, in states preceding sleep, or during passive activities such as watching television. In some cases, it presents itself consciously; in others, it remains partially obscured. In both forms, it often signals an unresolved psychological tension.

From a practical standpoint, such tensions can be approached through study. Books -particularly those written by individuals who have systematically examined similar problems- provide structured interpretations and potential frameworks for understanding.

Identify the fear. Select the relevant material. Read carefully. Internalize the argument. Adjust your thinking accordingly.

more...




13th of April, 2026

What Awards Will Nuandez.com Consider?

Here's the complete list of literary awards that Nuandez.com will track and consider for book recommendations, reviews, and features:

Nobel Prize in Literature. The most prestigious literary award in the world. Awarded annually by the Swedish Academy since 1901 for an author's entire body of work. Winners receive a gold medal, a diploma, and a cash prize of 11 million SEK (approximately $1.1–1.2 million USD). It brings enormous global media attention and career-defining recognition.

Booker Prize. One of the most influential prizes for fiction written in English. First awarded in 1969. The winner receives ÂŁ50,000 and usually sees a major boost in sales. Since 2014 it has been open to authors of any nationality.

Pulitzer Prize. 23 annual awards administered by Columbia University in New York City for achievements in journalism, letters, and arts in the United States. Each winner receives a certificate and $15,000. Nuandez.com will focus on the categories of Fiction, Poetry, and Drama.

National Book Awards. Established in 1936 and presented annually in five categories: Fiction, Nonfiction, Poetry, Translated Literature, and Young People's Literature. Finalists receive $1,000, a medal, and a citation; winners receive $10,000 and a bronze sculpture.

International Booker Prize. Awarded annually for the best translated fiction published in English. The ÂŁ50,000 prize is shared equally between the author and translator. It highlights outstanding international literature in translation.

National Book Critics Circle Awards. Presented annually by the National Book Critics Circle for the finest books published in English in the United States. Awards cover Fiction, Nonfiction, Biography, Autobiography, Poetry, Criticism, and more. (No fixed cash amount for the main awards.)

PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction. An annual award for the best work of fiction by an American author, emphasizing literary merit over commercial success. The winner receives $15,000; each of the four finalists receives $5,000.

Hugo Awards. The leading awards for science fiction and fantasy, presented annually by the World Science Fiction Society. Categories include Best Novel, Novella, Novelette, and Short Story, among others. (No fixed monetary prize; winners receive a trophy.)

Nebula Awards. Presented annually by the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America (SFWA) for the best works of science fiction and fantasy published in the United States. Key categories include Novel, Novella, Novelette, and Short Story. (No fixed monetary prize.)

Edgar Allan Poe Awards (The Edgars). Awarded annually by the Mystery Writers of America for excellence in mystery, crime, and suspense writing. Categories include Best Novel and Best First Novel, among others. Winners receive a statue (no fixed cash prize for most categories).

Newbery Medal. Awarded annually by the American Library Association for the most distinguished contribution to American literature for children. One of the most respected children's book awards. (No cash prize; winners receive a gold medal.)

Neustadt International Prize for Literature. A biennial award given by the University of Oklahoma for outstanding literary achievement. Often called the "American Nobel," it includes a cash prize of $50,000 and a silver eagle feather.

Miguel de Cervantes Prize. The most prestigious literary award in the Spanish-speaking world, awarded annually by the Spanish Ministry of Culture for a writer's entire career. The winner receives €125,000.

more...




User avatar RainDrops

Warren’s advice is the bait: I want to be a billionaire too.Then reality sets in. Weeks later, it feels dry -relentlessly dry. Endless sentences packed with 80 words, 10 verbs, constant detours, layers of hidden meaning. Dense, demanding, exhausting.The excitement fades. Inevitably.Five hundred pages in, nothing seems to stick, and the dream of making money through investing begins to slip away. Listen... Focus on Jason Zweig’s commentary. Find the chapter everyone mentions. Take the core idea and throw the rest into the fire.

The best: The perfect gift -for your worst enemy.

The worst: Apologies, Warren. Charlie, CNBC
 Couldn’t decipher it.

Reading: 0 Art: 0 Wisdom: 5 Author: 4 Total: 3    Read count: 0 / March 19, 2026

Reading: 0

Art: 0

Wisdom: 5

Author: 4

Total: 3

Read count: 0 / 2026-03-19



User avatar SciAndFi

One of the greatest writers in world literature -perhaps alongside Cervantes and Shakespeare- unfolding across more than 800 pages the story of a student in the nihilistic Russia of the 1860s. A profound journey into the turmoil of the darker side of the human mind -and its consequences. An invaluable experience. A masterpiece without equal.

Reading: 9 Art: 8 Wisdom: 7 Author: 9 Total: 9    Read count: 1 / March 18, 2026

Reading: 9

Art: 8

Wisdom: 7

Author: 9

Total: 9

Read count: 1 / 2026-03-18



18th of March, 2026

Did Hermann Hesse and Carl Jung Ever Meet?

Hermann Hesse received the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1946. He shared a significant relationship with Carl Gustav Jung, the founder of analytical psychology, marked by personal meetings, correspondence, and the influence of Jungian ideas on Hesse’s writing.

The connection began in 1916 when Hesse suffered a nervous breakdown. He entered psychoanalysis with Dr. J.B. Lang, a pupil of Jung. Through Lang, Hesse encountered key Jungian concepts including the collective unconscious, archetypes, the shadow, anima, and individuation. These ideas directly shaped his novel Demian (written in 1917 and published in 1919), which Hesse credited with opening a new creative phase.

Hesse met Jung personally around 1917. In 1921, during another crisis while working on Siddhartha, he had several analytic sessions with Jung in Zurich. Hesse described the process as intense yet highly effective. Jung later confirmed in a 1950 letter that he had known Hesse since 1916 and that their discussions influenced Siddhartha and Steppenwolf.

They corresponded for decades (1919–1950). In 1919, Jung wrote an enthusiastic letter praising Demian as “masterly” and “a beam of a lighthouse on a stormy night.” Hesse incorporated Jungian themes into his major works, including shadow integration in Steppenwolf, self-realization and the maternal archetype in Siddhartha, and the unity of opposites.

In their later years, both men independently befriended Chilean writer Miguel Serrano, who documented his friendships with them in the 1966 book C.G. Jung and Hermann Hesse: A Record of Two Friendships.

Jung served as an important catalyst for Hesse. Through therapy and ideas, he helped transform personal crises into literary explorations of the self. Hesse regarded Jung as a genius and an “immense mountain,” while Jung valued Hesse’s artistic expression of psychological themes.

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User avatar SciAndFi

Are you Narcissus or Goldmund?

This might be the finest book I have ever read. Like Demian, Siddhartha, Steppenwolf, The Glass Bead Game... it stands as another of Hermann Hesse’s spiritual journeys, perhaps the most dramatic of them all. Some passages are not merely read but felt —they send chills down the spine. A haunting journey from first page to last.

The best: Carl Gustav Jung’s concept of individuation. Two masters of their craft, meeting across disciplines.

Reading: 9 Art: 9 Wisdom: 8 Author: 8 Total: 8    Read count: 1 / March 16, 2026

Reading: 9

Art: 9

Wisdom: 8

Author: 8

Total: 8

Read count: 1 / 2026-03-16



User avatar RainDrops

Ignition

I keep reading it over and over. Every chapter is just 1-3 pages long but delivers a powerful idea. It takes each 1–5 minutes to read -and perhaps 24-48 hours (as I suggest) to truly digest. The process repeats endlessly, in an infinite loop. It remains handy and magnetic. Simple, easy to understand, friendly, and powerful. Like the greatest books, it offers the best answers. Even Jeff Bezos himself likes it...

The best: A great starting point for aspiring entrepreneurs. "Draw a line in the sand", "Scratch your own itch"...

Reading: 8 Art: 5 Wisdom: 9 Author: 7 Total: 8    Read count: 4 / March 15, 2026

Reading: 8

Art: 5

Wisdom: 9

Author: 7

Total: 8

Read count: 4 / 2026-03-15



User avatar RainDrops

Top advisor

I found the book is actually targeted at a very specific audience: logo designers. If you're a professional -or want to become one someday- David shares valuable tips, not just for the design process itself (mind-mapping, drawing, sketching, etc.) but especially for communicating with clients. That latter part is heavily emphasized, and it felt unnecessary for the average reader. So, I'd say this is a complementary book that will make you better at your craft, but it's a bit short on content and feels too basic in places.

Reading: 5 Art: 4 Wisdom: 6 Author: 5 Total: 5    Read count: 2 / February 26, 2026

Reading: 5

Art: 4

Wisdom: 6

Author: 5

Total: 5

Read count: 2 / 2026-02-26



User avatar RainDrops

"The Google guy"

Number of insights in this book is impressive. I usually take notes to capture every “aha” moment -and I ended up with roughly 52 pages of annotations. My website has already been optimized, and I’m confident the results will follow as I apply these lessons.
This is the kind of book that takes time to digest, but it puts you in the right frame of mind. One thing to keep in mind: SEO is essential, but it’s not easy.

The best: The wisdom it offers. Countless insights.

The worst: The realization that ranking a website on Google takes time, effort, and patience.

Reading: 5 Art: 4 Wisdom: 8 Author: 7 Total: 7    Read count: 2 / February 22, 2026

Reading: 5

Art: 4

Wisdom: 8

Author: 7

Total: 7

Read count: 2 / 2026-02-22