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The Gift
The Gift
Oct 22, 2024 3:24 AM

Author:Arun Gandhi

The Gift

Be inspired in 2020 by Ghandi's ten lessons for life.

Gandhi was an icon, but what would he teach us if he were alive today?

___________

In this Sunday Times bestseller, his grandson Arun reveals the ten vital and extraordinary lessons his grandfather taught him, all of which are more relevant now than ever . . .

Arun believes that the violence and turmoil in the world today makes Gandhi's teachings more vital than ever, and The Gift places these lessons in a modern context, shedding new light on how Gandhi's principles can - and must - be applied to today's concerns.

The moving, often irreverent, story of Arun's years growing up at the iconic Sevagram ashram provides the setting for the treasured moments spent his grandfather, which are an engaging and often surprising read. These memories give a rare insight into Gandhi the man behind the icon, and reveal the motivations behind his ten inspirational lessons which we can all learn from today.

From using anger for good, to knowing your own worth, we can all learn something from Ghandi and become better versions of ourselves.

Formerly published as The Gift of Anger.

Reviews

Writing about the spirit of place is sometimes like nailing jelly to the wall, but Somerville's thoughtful, occasionally poetic prose hits the spot for a book that sets out to define the genius loci of these magnificent buildings.

—— Ian Vince , Countryfile

Cathedrals are all things to all people. ... To capture all this, vividly and stylishly, in one, not-very-long book suggests something close to divine inspiration ... Yet it’s not the breadth of his travels that impresses. You can buy many a glossy gazetteer that gives you the tourist spiel on dozens more British cathedrals than the 20 he covers. Rather, it’s the depth of the “cathedral experience” that he uncovers by the old-fashioned journalistic method of getting knowledgeable people to talk freely about what they know best, then using his sharp eyes and wits to fill in the rest of the story.

—— Richard Morrison , The Times

[Christopher Somerville's] writing is utterly enticing

—— Jenny Walters , Country Walking

[A] friendly wander around twenty-one British Cathedrals, Christopher Somerville, the walking correspondent of The Times, passes the hard test giving life to buildings that most readers have never visited…He provides many human faces to the cathedrals he visits…I hope he inspires readers to go for themselves

—— Christopher Howe , Literary Review

Cathedrals are perhaps Christianity's greatest modern ambassadors in these islands: welcoming portals to experiences and emotions beyond everyday concerns. Christopher Somerville is a genial companion as far as the remotest among these glorious communities, and charmingly opens the private doors at which visitors cast speculative glances.

—— Diarmaid MacCulloch, Professor of the History of the Church, University of Oxford

Christopher is a great storyteller and he has found many and various tales associated with the cathedrals to savour. The past is represented by inscriptions on memorials, cathedral records, dramas from the past and quite a few scandals. Interspersed with these engaging evocations are precisely worded observations about the architectural ‘feel’ of the cathedrals as places. One benefits from his longstanding experience as a professional walker with a gift of writing poetically about landscape. This is not a conventional architectural guide, more a personal and intuitive response to experiencing what should be recognised as our most important architectural heritage - altogether a most enjoyable read.

—— Sir Jeremy Dixon

Lively and engaging: I do admire Christopher Somerville’s ability to blend historical detail with keen observations of the current life of our cathedrals

—— Canon Christopher Irvine

Fascinatingly informative reading... It might even convince the sceptic of the continuing importance - and relevance - of the 'Ships of Heaven', and their role in 21st Century society. I heartily recommend this book.

—— David Knight , Canterbury Cathedral Chronicle 2019

There are plenty of books on Britain's Cathedrals...but 'Ships of Heaven' is a bit different...It's a book of stories about the people who have given the buildings their character through the ages and those who cherish them today.

—— Rev William Howard, Secretary of the Friends of Coventry Cathedral

Somerville is one of our finest gazetteers of the British countryside, as his numerous books and articles testify. He must have walked more of these isles than just about any other living writer, and he brings his formidable knowledge to bear on his personal quest to explore the cathedrals — a quest that began when, as a boy, he leaned so far back to admire the facade of Wells cathedral that he fell over and was left gazing at the sky. Across which the heavy galleons of these magnificent medieval creations have now sailed in this entrancing book.

—— Hugh Thomson , The Spectator

Somerville regales us with things temporal and spiritual, with tales of saints and deadly sins in abundance, of glass-makers, masons, cleaners and clergy - because a cathedral is a lively part of unfolding human history.

—— Saga Magazine

Christopher Somerville paints word pictures of exquisite quality, catching 21 cathedrals’ oddities and peculiarities and sheer glory.

—— David Wilbourne , Church Times

Meeting believers and non-believers, architects and archaeologists, the cleaner who dusts the monuments and the mason who judges stone by its taste, we delve deep into the private lives and the uncertain future of these ever-voyaging Ships of Heaven.

—— This is England

Readers will find this book riveting.

—— The Church of England Newspaper
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