It all started with Saurabh, a self-proclaimed bookworm who proudly lists “reading novels” on his resume. After spending a decade in roles spanning ops, strategy, product management, and sales — often working closely with CXOs — he realized how difficult it can be to stay connected with fiction when everyone seems focused on non-fiction, entrepreneurship, and self-help. Despite the trends pushing people toward business books, his love for fiction never waned. This led to the creation of Celsius 233, a way for busy people like himself to stay connected to the world of novels, even when life gets in the way.
The Thames Valley Catastrophe by Grant Allen is a disaster novel detailing the sudden eruption of a volcanic fissure that obliterates London in a fiery apocalypse.
The Mountain Girl by Emma Payne Erskine is a historical romance set in the Appalachian wilderness, where an English doctor finds love and adventure in an unfamiliar world.
The Secret City by Sir Hugh Walpole is set in Petrograd during World War I and the Russian Revolution, capturing love, betrayal, and political upheaval.
Poor Jack by Frederick Marryat follows young Tom Saunders as he navigates life along the Thames, encountering sailors, hardships, and self-discovery in Victorian England.
The Iron Woman by Margaret Deland portrays Sarah Maitland, a determined steel mill owner, struggling between business ambition, family, and the rigid norms of society.
The Technique of the Mystery Story by Carolyn Wells is a guide on crafting detective fiction, blending analysis, storytelling methods, and the psychology of suspense.
The Capture of a Slaver by John Taylor Wood details a U.S. naval operation off West Africa, exposing the horrors of the transatlantic slave trade in vivid detail.
Trek’s End by John Walker is a sci-fi short story about an astronaut witnessing Earth's destruction, exploring interstellar conflict and humanity’s fragile existence.
Fahrenheit 451, written by Ray Bradbury, was published in 1953. 1984, written by Goerge Orwell, was published in 1949. Both the books came out less than a decade after the termination of WWI, are set in dystopian worlds with high technological advancements, and ventures around the life of a middle aged man getting tired of the new world order. But that's where the comparison stops and the story begins.