Desire compels people to attain what is rare. It inspires them to strive for something more than what they have and to take a leap into the unknown. I believe that the conflict between life and death as well as war and peace are important juxtapositions within the contradictions of nature. Try Again is an insightful collection of poems and songs that give an honest look at the struggles of success, the complexity of the human condition, and the insight required to become the person that we are meant to become. I wrote this book out of the hope that people will be inspired by obstacles that I have overcome and see that they can also become the captains of their fate and sculpt their experiences into something meaningful and great!
Aida Mandić (1990—) was born in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina to Bosniak parents. She escaped the Bosnian War and genocide as a baby (in a bulletproof vest) and lived in Croatia, a refugee camp in the Czech Republic, France, and Malaysia when she was a little girl. Aida attended the University of Michigan — Ann Arbor and graduated in 2012. She also studied English Literature abroad at the University of Oxford. She has taken online courses from Harvard, Stanford, Dartmouth, the University of Pennsylvania, The Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Princeton, Yale, Singularity University, and University of Nicosia, amongst others.
Aida worked in sales and marketing in her early career. Aida is the Founder and CEO of Searchkey, an education technology company she formed in 2017. Searchkey is an edtech platform that helps empower students to find funding, resources, and information for their education so they can achieve their academic goals. Aida hopes to inspire students from disadvantaged backgrounds to find scholarships, reach their potential, and achieve their dreams. Ms. Mandić was awarded $150,000 in scholarships and merit-based grants as well as $100,000 in awards. She received full-ride scholarship offers to several top universities, totaling over a million dollars. Aida has also been offered numerous scholarships and fellowships to highly prestigious and selective MBA and PhD programs.
She is the author of 129 books, including: How Winners Are Made, What Is Life Anyway?, A Candid Aim, Justice For Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Incognito Checkmate. Aida is currently writing her next book. She has written over 100 books which she plans to publish over time. She is the recipient of multiple prestigious awards such as the Motor City Match Award, World Economic Forum Global Shaper, Forbes Fellow, OXFAM CHANGE Leader, and National Academy of Social Insurance Conference Scholar. She was selected as a finalist in the 2016 American Songwriting Awards, received a 2015 Director's Award from the Paramount Song Nashville International Song and Lyric Writing Competition, and was a Nominee in the 2015 USA Songwriting Competition as well as the International Songwriting Competition. Aida was nominated by the UN's Global Forum on Remittance, Investment, and Development as a RemTECH Awards Nominee, a Jovani IT Girl Contest Semifinalist, a Discover Card Tribute semifinalist, and as a Visa Everywhere Initiative Semifinalist. She was a U.S. Ambassador at the 2012 G(irls) 20 Summit and has also received recognition for her leadership in technology by Intercon as a Top 50 Tech Leader award nominee. She has served in a variety of different roles such as motivational speaker, translator, teacher, social media consultant, and scholarship advisor. She enjoys mentoring youth in her free time by encouraging them to live a positive, constructive, and ambitious lifestyle.
I believe that a new literary movement, Guidism, should be utilized to explore the choices which shape our lives and how they define our literary genres and themes. Genres should not only be based on form, style, and
I've been deeply moved by the poems that Aida has written and shared in this book. They've resonated strongly with my life experiences and pushed me to self-reflection. As the summary points out, this is a thought-provoking book. It is both inspired and inspiring. After reading it, I really want to try again...
I've also enjoyed the second part of the book, which contains shocking, but really important information about the Bosnian war and its aftermath. I'm now a bit less clueless about modern history. History books and classes need to share those stories so that humanity always remembers what happens when evil is allowed to commit crimes without being stopped.