BOOK DETAILS :
- Publisher : Mithaas Services Pvt Ltd (20 July 2025)
- Paperback : 285 pages
- ISBN-10 : 9392144989
- ISBN-13 : 978-9392144981
- Reading age : 15 years and up
ABOUT THE AUTHOR :
Chirasree Bose is a critically acclaimed Indian author known for her impactful storytelling. With five fiction titles and a nomination for the prestigious AutHer Award 2022 by JK Paper and Times of India, she now debuts in the non-fiction genre with Manhood Womanhood Let’s Talk Humanhood, bringing a deeply personal and relatable voice to human experience and emotional growth.
BOOK REVIEW :
π¬ “This book doesn’t tell you what to do—it sits beside you, listens, and reminds you that you’re not alone in this human mess called life.”
Every once in a while, a non-fiction book comes along that doesn’t feel like a lecture or a set of motivational mantras—but more like a heartfelt late-night conversation. Manhood Womanhood “Let’s Talk Humanhood” by Chirasree Bose is exactly that. It’s not just a self-help book; it’s a mirror, a companion, and sometimes, the voice you’ve been searching for when everything else feels too loud.
From the very first page, Chirasree speaks directly to the reader, “you” in a tone that’s comforting, disarmingly honest, and deeply personal. The book travels through the many stages of being human; childhood, adolescence, and adulthood; exploring emotions, identity, mental health, and the fragile art of connection. It’s an emotional roadmap for those who’ve ever felt lost, lonely, or misunderstood (which, let’s face it, is all of us).
What makes this book stand out is its approach. It doesn’t try to fix you; it simply helps you understand yourself better. Instead of structured chapters, it flows like an intimate dialogue, blurring the line between writer and reader. Each section feels like a pause, a breath, a moment of reflection.
Chirasree doesn’t shy away from vulnerability—she draws from her own experiences, mistakes, and revelations, creating a raw emotional intimacy that’s rare in self-help literature. You’ll find traces of your own life in her words: the confusion of growing up, the ache of failed choices, the beauty of rediscovery, and the quiet strength that comes from simply surviving.


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