Written on 10th March 2026 by Ezekiel
by Kenneth .E. Hagin
I love Kenneth.E. Hagin’s books. I’ve read four of them. Each has all massively changed the way I see Christianity and Spirituality.
Growing up Spiritually divides Christians into 3; babies, children and adults.
He writes about the properties of the 3 and writes that we have a lot of spiritual children in the church. He further explained how a believer can transition from a child to an adult.
by Ellen Atlanta
This is more of a journalism book. I got referred to this book by Gemini AI and I read it in a day or so.
The author writes about the beauty standard. She also slightly complains about how the patriarchy ingrained itself in every nook and cranny of the system.
About the beauty standard, she complains about how social media platforms reward ingenuity when it comes to content about beauty and makeup, How filters and Facetune make women feel bad about themselves in real life. I will stop here. It was really a lot and, it was directed at the girls.
In his book “The Screwtape Letters”, C.S. Lewis admits the same. The difference though is that he attributes the whole situation to the works of devils.
Even though his book was written over 100 years ago. I would be afraid to say that (if true) these “devils” have done soooo much worse between the last 15 years than the previous 300.
Lastly, it was written by a woman for women.
by Adewale Adetunji
The title looked odd at first. When I read it, it made a lot of sense. Though, this books has a lot of ideas that are more mainstream as of now. It takes a spiritual source to most things in life and prioritizes finding your purpose , getting a skill and loving others.
by Aditya Bhargava
I don’t enjoy programming books (they are never meant to be enjoyed). This was the first I ever enjoyed. Trust me, it was really nice reading experience. The diagrams were very comical and expressive.
The author explained complex algorithms like Dijkstra and K nearest neighbors in ways that made it seem like it was a 3 year old that is reading it.
This is usually the first book I recommend to every programmer, if he/she wants to be good at algorithms.
It really helps with the foundations.
by Shane Parriish
This is by favorite self help, motivational book. I read it during the 6 months internship. It starts from identifying some things that impedes us from making effective decisions. It also give some solutions to each of these irrationalities. It reminds me of a lot of stuff I already knew. It also added some tit-bits to it like;
It is a good book if you want to know how to dream big and achieve stuff, yet keep things realistic.
I am still reading. I have some books in a queue that I’m trying to grasp.
If you have a favourite book you’d like to share, feel free to at ezekielakinfenwa98@gmail.com