What We Are Reading Today: Before the Coffee Gets Cold

Short Url
Updated 30 May 2023
Follow

What We Are Reading Today: Before the Coffee Gets Cold

RIYADH: “Before the Coffee Gets Cold,” published in 2015, is a time travel-themed novel written by famous Japanese playwright Toshikazu Kawaguchi and translated to English by Geoffrey Trousselot.

In the novel, four women wish to travel back in time for various reasons, whether to confront the man who left them, to receive a letter from a husband suffering from Alzheimer’s disease, to visit a loved one for the last time, or to see a daughter they were never able to meet.

A cafe located in a small back alley in Tokyo not only serves coffee to its customers but also offers a one-of-a-kind experience: a chance to go back in time.

The journey to the past, however, isn’t so easy. One must follow a set of rules to journey safely: The time traveler must sit in a particular seat, not leave the cafe, and return to the present before the coffee gets cold.

Each chapter in the novel is dedicated to a particular customer at the cafe, but the different customers also make appearances in each other’s stories throughout, and they support one another in their journeys.

The customers’ stories are rooted in difficult circumstances and filled with grief and misfortune, but while the cafe doesn’t offer the much sought-after second chance in life, it does provide something equally significant: closure.

The cafe’s customers confront and make amends for their losses, even though they are aware they won’t be able to change anything once the coffee gets cold and they return to the present.

“Before the Coffee Gets Cold” is a sad, sweet, yet hopeful novel. Kawaguchi conveys a powerful message through the stories of the four characters, emphasizing that while the past is unchangeable, the future is always within reach.

The book is the first part of a series, followed by three other books titled: “Tales from the Cafe” (2021), “Before Your Memory Fades” (2022), and “Before We Say Goodbye” (2023).


What We Are Reading Today: ‘Ego is the Enemy’

Photo/Supplied
Updated 19 January 2026
Follow

What We Are Reading Today: ‘Ego is the Enemy’

  • Reading this made me reflect on moments when I was more focused on proving myself than improving myself, when ego pushed me to speak before listening or rush before learning

Author: Ryan Holiday

I did not pick up “Ego is the Enemy” by Ryan Holiday because I thought I had a big ego. Like most people, I assumed the book was meant for someone else: the overly confident, the loud, the self-obsessed. I certainly did not think I was being sabotaged by my own ego.

That assumption did not last long. By the time I moved through the first section of the book, it became clear that ego is not always obvious and that was the unsettling part. 

What Holiday does so effectively is break the book into three distinct stages: when you are aspiring for success, when you are successful, and when you hit failure.

In each stage, he shows how ego quietly and secretly works against you. Not through arrogance alone, but through impatience, comparison, defensiveness, and the need to validate yourself instead of doing the work. 

In the aspiration stage, ego disguises itself as ambition. It convinces you that wanting something badly is the same as earning it, and that recognition should come before mastery.

Reading this made me reflect on moments when I was more focused on proving myself than improving myself, when ego pushed me to speak before listening or rush before learning. 

The success stage was even more uncomfortable. Holiday explains how ego, once fed, can turn success into a trap. It creates a false sense of permanence, making you believe past wins are enough to carry you forward.

This section felt like a reminder to stay grounded, to resist entitlement, and to understand that real confidence often shows up as humility and restraint, not noise. 

Then comes failure, the stage we try hardest to avoid. Here, ego becomes fragile. It refuses accountability, blames circumstances, and turns setbacks into personal attacks. Holiday reframes failure as a test of character rather than identity, and this shift felt liberating.

The book does not just point out how ego sabotages you at this stage; it shows you how to catch it, sit with discomfort, and respond with discipline instead of defensiveness. 

What I appreciated most about “Ego is the Enemy” is that it does not try to motivate you with grand promises. It simply sharpens your awareness.

Through historical examples, athletes, writers, and leaders, Holiday illustrates how ego has quietly undone many capable people and how others learned to master it. 

For me, this book became less about fixing myself and more about managing myself. It encouraged me to detach from validation, focus on process over praise, and recognize ego not as an enemy to destroy, but as something to constantly monitor. 

If you are looking for a book that flatters you, this is not it. But if you are willing to acknowledge that your ego may be working against you even when you think it is not, “Ego is the Enemy” is a powerful and honest place to start.