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 Three Clerks by Anthony Trollope follows three young men navigating careers in the British civil service, balancing ambition, romance, and bureaucratic challenges.
An aspiring writer turns memory into art, uncovering love, loss, and the pain of becoming in a quietly powerful journey through youth, ambition, and emotional truth.
An Eye for an Eye by Anthony Trollope explores love, honor, and tragic consequences as an English soldier's secret romance in Ireland spirals toward disaster.
The Wheels of Chance by H.G. Wells follows Mr. Hoopdriver, a draper’s assistant, on a cycling adventure that offers a humorous critique of Victorian social norms.
The Book of Snobs by William Makepeace Thackeray humorously critiques social pretension through vivid sketches of individuals obsessed with class and status.
A ruthless king defends his reign over a land soaked in blood, as voices of truth rise to expose a chilling empire built on greed, terror, and sanctimonious lies.
Riceyman Steps by Arnold Bennett examines post-World War I life in London’s Clerkenwell district, portraying greed, obsession, and human frailty in urban society.
The Burial of the Rats by Bram Stoker is a suspenseful horror story set in 19th-century Paris, where a young Englishman is pursued by sinister rag-pickers.