This is a terrific book. Honest & highly readable, 'When The Road Beckons' is a first-person account of a young Indian who is on a quest to discover the very purpose of his life. The narrator is a disillusioned youth who is not just suicidal, but who's also unhappy with everything he has done in his life so far. So one day, he invests all the money that he has to buy a Royal Enfiled Thunderbird motorcycle, finds two friends who are willing to undertake the journey with him, and leaves Delhi for the mountains to find answers to his questions, some known to him, and some simmering deep inside. The group of three travels through Kashmir and Himachal Pradesh, navigating on roads not known to be motorable, crisscrossing some of the most difficult mountain passes in the world, and risking their lives on more than a few occasions. The journey, in a way, introduces the narrator to the man he is capable of, waking him up in the process to his deepest desires, testing his nerves, making him fight with his innermost fears, and transforming him into the kind of person who is in firmer control of his destiny. That said, this book has a few typos and errors. I haven't taken any stars away for this, as I am aware that this is a self-published book and the author had no help from anyone. Yet, you must read this book and discover what a journey can do to a human soul.