Perhaps the most poignant story is the one about a doyen of the university department of chemical technology in Mumbai, M.M. Sharma, and how he helped the nascent chemical industry of India get affordable solutions. “Prof Sharma advised more than 25 companies during his life-time. Dhirubhai Ambani, founder of Reliance Petrochemicals, relied on his advice for setting up plants,” writes Pulakkat. Giants like Prof Sharma nurtured young scientists like Raghunath Anant Mashelkar, a stalwart chemical engineer who went on to be christened as the “CEO of CSIR”. Mashelkar’s tale is particularly touching—his father was a small grocery shop owner and his mother did odd jobs. “Things had become difficult at home when Mashelkar reached high school. His mother did not have money to pay the fee of Rs 21 required for admission to secondary school, but a friend—a maid who worked in prosperous households in Chowpatty—offered the money,” writes Pulakkat. From this humble beginning, Mashelkar went on to become director-general of the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research and was possibly the only scientist who was simultaneously on the boards of both Tata and Reliance! Today’s start-up entrepreneurs need to know the virtues of patience to have lasting careers and not burn up like shooting stars.