Monday, 13 January 2014

Book review of Shiva Triology




I recently happened to read the series of the Shiva trilogy. The reason I mentioned the word ‘happened’ is because, never the one who is much interested in mythology, the first two books were thrust upon me by the voracious reader sister of mine. The story had me so much in its grip that I purchased the third one of the series all by myself!
The Shiva trilogy has proved to be the trend changer in the Indian book scene. The series is creative, out-of-the-box and very much Indian.

The Story of the man, whom legend turned into a God”. A man becomes great as a result of his karma in this world. This book presented a Shiva I could connect to, from removing the ban on the vikarma (signified the fight against superstitions) to cracking jokes (which makes him as earthy as me). I learnt about the philosophy of the good and the evil, the balance between them, the greater good turning to be the evil incarnate. The concept of the feminine and the masculine is superbly portrayed by the kingdoms of Meluha and Swadweep. The fact that even great people, like lord Rudra and Shiva himself, make mistakes and are supreme enough to realize it and atone it.

One of the best parts of the book for me was the scientific reasoning behind all that magical technology of those times. It was interesting to read about the magic behind the divya astras, the bhramastra, and such (Amish has definitely done his research).
The book isn’t about whether Shiva will win, that’s a given but rather about how a man becomes so loveable that we still love, fear and worship him to this day. The concept is fresh, ideas brave and writing simple. The narrative is pacy and the book rushes through – pausing at the right places for the correct duration – and then riding out to a very pulsating end. This trilogy written by debut author Amish Tripati who is an IIM, Kolkata graduate, is for sure worth of having as a collection.

The first edition of the trilogy being “The Immortals of Meluha” which is followed by “The Secret of the Nagas” and the recently released is the final edition of the trilogy “The Oath of the Vayuputras”.

6 comments:

  1. Ohhhhhh wow.....u can become a writer for sure dear...

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  2. After reading what u have written I am tempted to read it :)

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  3. Its definitely a review which gives you a craving to find the book and start exploring by plunging into writers fictional world of Shiva and also to find the scientific reasoning behind mythology.

    I also felt that the review still has opportunities where a little more detail would have set it ablaze and would have left reader so much hungry that he/she would have killed anyone to get the book!

    I would give 3.5 out 5 and a thumbs up! :)

    All the best for your next read and review!

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