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Strength lies in differences; not in similarities
- Stephan Covey

Stephan Thiemonds
The Word Constructor
Swati Mehra
The Creative Constructor
The Mind Constructor
Mohit Mehra
Stephan Thiemonds
Author
A German service engineer who found his calling as a Writer and a World-traveller. In the summer of 2002, he set on a bicycle journey around the world that lasted many months and took him across multiple continents. Since 2003, Stephan has travelled across the world working for Buss-SMS-Canzler GmbH based in Butzbach, Germany, a manufacturer of industrial machines, specialized in process engineering.
He is passionate about traveling, tightening screws(!) and is always on the lookout to learn something new. The myriad first-hand experiences while travelling the world, including Antarctica, inspired him to write his semi-autobiographical short stories. Until now, he has written seven books in Germany. A selection of stories from these books has been translated into English under the umbrella of 359 degrees. The English book was further translated into Mandarin and published in China in early 2016, which is accepted widely by the Chinese-reading audience.
Swati Mehra
Editor & Marketer
Originally a Marketing Professional, Swati has worked with companies in India and abroad adorning various roles. Due to her flair for writing, she pursued her career as a Content Specialist. Being a grammar nazi, she played an important role in translating and editing 359 degrees - Worker, Writer, World-traveller as per the taste of Indian audience. From editing the book to developing a final product, Mehra put her experience to use towards launching the book.
Mohit Mehra
Acquiriing editor
Getting 359 degrees - Worker, Writer, World-traveller to India was his brainchild. Mohit is a Chemical and Process Engineer by profession. A work-related chance meeting with Stephan, and the days that followed, led to the idea of launching this book in India. The simplicity with which Stephan explains the life of an Engineer as an industrial gypsy conveyed in a satirical tone is what Mohit wanted the Indian reading audience to experience. And all this with a backdrop of the


