Poetry, Essays & Reflections – Visit My Amazon Author Page


I’m happy to share that my books now have a dedicated home on Amazon through my Author Page. This space brings together my diverse writings—poems, sayings, essays, and reflective pieces that explore consciousness, human experience, and the inner journey. Readers can browse my published works, read descriptions, and stay connected as new books are added.
For many, my writing has served as a quiet invitation to pause, reflect, and rediscover clarity. Having an Author Page allows me to reach those readers more easily and continue that conversation. If you’ve followed my work or would like to explore it, I invite you to visit the page, bookmark it, and share it with anyone who may resonate with this blend of poetry and philosophy.
Here is the link to my Amazon Author Page (below them is a description of one of my recent books):

On Amazon.com

www.amazon.com/author/samar

On Amazon.in

www.amazon.in/stores/D.-Samarender-Reddy/author/B0CB7PMW36

“Poems, Sayings & Essays” (www.amazon.in/Poems-Sayings-Essays-Samarender-Reddy-ebook/dp/B0FY796RM3) is a deeply reflective collection that weaves together poetry, philosophy, and spiritual insight—a contemplative journey through the mind’s questions and the soul’s silences. Written with the clarity of a thinker and the sensitivity of a poet, this book explores the inner landscapes of love, loss, freedom, awareness, and awakening, blending the wisdom of Indian philosophy with modern human experience.

Each page moves between the lyrical and the logical, capturing fleeting emotions and timeless truths. The author’s words echo the essence of Advaita Vedānta—the realization that all separations are illusions, that everything we seek outside already resides within. In these reflections, the line between the individual and the universal blurs; the reader is gently invited to witness how consciousness itself becomes both the question and the answer.

The poems are luminous fragments of experience—meditations on impermanence, intimacy, and the longing to belong. Some speak with disarming simplicity; others unveil a quiet depth that unfolds slowly. A poem may begin with the ache of human love and end with the serenity of surrender. In them, joy and despair, humor and humility, coalesce into a kind of spiritual realism—honest, raw, and redeeming.

The sayings—aphoristic, paradoxical, and often startling—reveal a sharp philosophical insight:

“When you stop naming, life starts revealing.”
“Ego is not your enemy—it’s God in disguise, playing human.”
“The hatred and love within us spill over and show up sooner or later in history textbooks.”

Each saying is a pause—a moment of recognition between illusion and truth, between thought and silence. These are not meant to be believed, but to be seen through.

The essays form the intellectual and spiritual spine of the collection. They engage with themes such as self-realization, non-duality, karma, dharma, free will, truth, and the nature of consciousness. The author revisits eternal questions—What is happiness? Why do we suffer? Can science grasp spirit? What happens when morality dissolves into awareness?—not to prescribe answers but to awaken reflection. Drawing from sources as diverse as the Upanishads, Krishnamurti, Ramana Maharshi, Tagore, and modern existential thought, the essays illuminate the meeting point of spirituality and psychology, intellect and intuition.

Throughout the book, a thread of Indian spiritual humanism runs quietly. It is the conviction that enlightenment is not an escape from the world but an intimacy with it. Whether the author reflects on a Tagore lyric, a scene from daily life, or a modern song like Where the Streets Have No Name, the underlying message remains: Truth is not in heaven; it is here, now, in awareness itself.

“Poems, Sayings & Essays” is not a manual of answers—it is a mirror. It does not preach; it questions. It does not promise salvation; it invites understanding. It belongs to that rare category of works that transcend genre—part poetic diary, part philosophical treatise, part spiritual memoir—and yet, unmistakably, a journey of self-discovery.

For readers of Rumi, Khalil Gibran, Krishnamurti, or Marcus Aurelius, this book will feel like a companion—at once intimate and expansive, contemplative yet grounding. It speaks to seekers, skeptics, and lovers of poetry alike—those who have known beauty and bewilderment, faith and fatigue, and who still ask, “Who am I beneath all that changes?”

If you have ever sat by a window in silence, watching your own thoughts dissolve into light, this book will meet you there.

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