Welcome to Serene Reads & Dramatic Escapes by Moushmi!
I don’t know about you, but there are days when I feel completely out of sync with myself. When everything feels heavy, and even the things I love don’t spark anything inside.
And during those moments, it’s never a self-help book or a motivational book that helps me. It’s a quiet story. A slow-paced book. A character who’s hurting too… but somehow finds the will to move forward.
So I wanted to share something personal today — 5 books that felt like little pockets of healing for me. If you’ve been feeling lost, broken, numb, or just not like you, maybe one of these books will remind you it’s okay to slow down… and it’s okay to begin again.
๐ฟBlog Overview:
Serene Reads & Dramatic Escapes is my little corner on the internet, a space where I talk about books that feel like warm hugs and stories that let you escape into new worlds.
Some books feel like a gentle reminder that you’re not alone. Others are dramatic, intense, or just plain fun. But all of them? They’re chosen with love.
Whether you're looking for something to comfort you on a rainy day or a story that’ll make your heart race, I hope you find something here that speaks to you something that helps, heals, or simply holds your hand when things feel too much.
If you’re craving stories where love feels like safety, these books are a good place to start:
๐Days at the Morisaki Bookshop & More Days at the Morisaki Bookshop by Satoshi Yagisawa- Book link
There are some books that don’t just tell a story — they find you when you need them the most.
For me, the Morisaki Bookshop series did exactly that.
Both of these books gently nudged me back into reading when I had stopped for a while. They healed a quiet part of me, reminding me that it’s okay to slow down, to let go, and to start again — even if it’s messy, even if you’re not sure what you’re doing.
Set in a little bookstore tucked away in Tokyo’s Jimbocho, these stories aren’t loud or dramatic. They’re soft, patient, and kind. You meet characters who are flawed but full of heart — people who wait for each other, support each other, and grow in their own quiet ways.
It’s about books, family, heartbreak, and choosing yourself — again and again.
And sometimes, that’s all we really need.
๐️ A quote I love:
"Even when you feel like you're stuck in one place, time still moves forward."
๐The Blue Umbrella by Ruskin Bond - Book link
This book is short, sweet, and surprisingly moving. When I picked it up, I didn’t expect it to gently tug at my heart the way it did. At first glance, it seems like a simple story about a little girl and her pretty blue umbrella—but it’s really about kindness, envy, and learning that letting go can bring peace.
What stayed with me most was how kindness quietly weaves its way through this story. It's not loud or showy—it’s soft, unspoken, and deeply human. It reminded me that kindness doesn’t have to be a grand gesture.
Sometimes it’s as simple as choosing compassion over anger, or giving something away not because you have to, but because your heart tells you someone else needs it more. This book reminded me that when we act out of kindness, we don’t just help others—we also begin to heal something inside ourselves.
๐ “A little love and care would do him good, she thought. And now that she had given him her umbrella, she felt good too.” — Ruskin Bond.
๐ Sweet Bean Paste by Durian Sukegawa - Book Link
This book feels like a quiet afternoon — slow, healing, and unexpectedly moving. Sweet Bean Paste isn't just about making dorayaki; it’s about listening, observing, and truly being in the moment. Tokue, with her wrinkled hands and soft voice, doesn't rush a single thing — not her thoughts, not the cooking, not even life. Her way of interacting with the world reminded me that there’s beauty in simply pausing and paying attention.
The character Sentaro carries a heavy past — and while it doesn’t vanish, this story gently reminds us that our past doesn’t have to be a life sentence. Mistakes, regrets, or what society labels us as — they don't have to define who we are becoming.
Kindness plays such a big role here — not loud or heroic, but the kind that stays in the background and still changes lives. The kind that tells you you’re worth something, even if you don’t see it yourself.
“We were born in order to see and listen to the world.” — Durian Sukegawa
This isn’t a dramatic tale. It’s a slow burn — one that leaves behind a warm, quiet ache. And somehow, it made me want to live more attentively, more gently.
4. As Long as the Lemon Trees Grow by Zoulfa Katouh - Book link
๐ “I will tell God everything.”
This single sentence, uttered by a child, shattered me. It’s quiet, but it screams. It holds the grief of a nation, the loss of innocence, and the haunting silence of those who were never heard. This book is not just a war story — it is a love letter to survival, to memory, to every soul caught between holding on and letting go.
Through Salama’s eyes, we witness how war doesn’t just destroy cities — it fractures the heart. There’s trauma, yes. Fear. Guilt. But also an aching tenderness that exists even in the darkest places — in the form of a stranger who becomes a lifeline, in the scent of lemons from better times, and in love that arrives unexpectedly like a quiet sunrise.
This book made me weep and smile in the same breath. It showed me how hope survives even in rubble, how kindness can still bloom, and how we carry the people we lose — in our decisions, in our promises, in our healing.
It taught me that grief can be loud or soft, messy or still — but it’s always valid. That chaos doesn’t mean the absence of beauty. And that in the most broken moments, humanity still finds a way to reach out and hold on.
If you’ve ever struggled with loss, felt weighed down by choices, or searched for meaning in pain — this story will find you. And it will stay with you.
✨Book 5: The Kamogawa Food Detectives by Hisashi Kashiwai - Book link
This book is like a warm bowl of soup on a rainy day — gentle, nostalgic, and comforting. In the small backstreets of Kyoto , a father-daughter duo doesn’t just cook — they recreate memories through food, helping customers reconnect with long-lost dishes tied to emotions, love, grief, and closure.
๐ฟWhat I took from it:
That kindness doesn’t always need words. Sometimes, just listening and caring is enough.
That grief can find peace in the little things: the taste of a forgotten meal, a shared silence, a heartfelt gesture.
And that in the chaos of life, slow days, good food, and safe spaces are more powerful than we think. If you’ve been reading heavy stories or carrying too much, let this one hold you gently.
“The memories tied to food are not just about flavor—they’re about people, places, and moments we want to hold onto.” Quote I Loved.
Just One Last Thing:
Love doesn’t always have to be loud; sometimes it’s in the quiet moments, the ones that make us feel seen and safe. These stories remind us of that gentle kind of love, and I hope one of them speaks to you just when you need it most.
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