After a full day of teaching — and all the obligations that come with a life — I read. Not casually. Seriously. Every day. Every weekend. Across thirty years, across every genre, discipline, and ideology I could find.
That understanding — that the ocean of human knowledge is infinite and a single life is very, very short — does not slow you down. It makes you hungrier. And the hunger eventually produced a question I could not ignore.
I looked for a website that could help me read with the depth and honesty I needed. I did not find a single one. So I built it myself — not as a platform, not as a product, but as a personal necessity that became a gift to share.
Every summary on this website was built first for me. The seven layers. The chapter by chapter breakdown. The honest weaknesses. The counter perspectives. The personalised path. All of it — built because I needed it, and could not find it anywhere else.
I am frustrated — genuinely, professionally, personally — with what we are doing to our children. An education system that produces students optimised for examinations. Parents who love deeply but have no tools for building thinking. Children trapped in a loop of school, tuition, homework, mobile — with no time for curiosity, no space for strategic play, no room for the kind of slow, unstructured reading that builds a mind for life.
I watched this as a teacher. I felt it as a mother. I carry the honest weight of knowing that financial constraints meant I could not build the curriculum I envisioned for my own children — not fully, not in the way I wanted.
So I am building it now. For the grandchildren I have not yet met. For every child the system forgot to make room for. For every parent who senses something is missing but does not have the tools or the language to name what it is.
Everything here — every summary, every skill, every framework, every honest question — is my gift.
I cannot choose your path. I would not want to.
But I can leave you the tools I spent a lifetime finding —
so you begin further along than I did.
What you do with them is entirely your own.