I read The Precious Ordinary slowly, the way you sip something warm when the day has been unkind. Not because the poems demanded caution, but because they kept asking me to pause. Midway through a page, I would stop—not to underline, not to analyse—but to notice the room I was sitting in, the quality of light, the way my own breath sounded. That, perhaps, is the first quiet transformation this book performs: it gently escorts you back into your own life. Trishala Niranjana
Some books arrive like an invitation you didn’t know you were waiting for. You open the first page expecting light chatter, a pleasant distraction, maybe a few smiles between sips of coffee—and then, somewhere between one chapter and the next, you realise you’ve been quietly pulled into a room full of lives that feel oddly familiar. The Secrets of Floor Five did that to me. It didn’t knock. It simply slid into the seat across from me and began talking, softly, honestly, until