~ Doctor. Author. Mahabharata fanatic. Yoga enthusiast. Sanskrit learner. Chiku's (my doggie) adopted hooman. Love to unfurl with pencil sketching, Kishore Kumar & black coffee laced with Hazelnut syrup. Curious about the Mystique.
A haunted well. A haunted generation of medical students. A lovelorn couple. A ghost who will stop at nothing to avenge her murder … but does she know who murdered her?
Dr Siddharth’s medical horror gives deja-vu moments of the thrills and banter that every 1st year med student faces – the ragging, the terror of putting a scalpel into a cadaver, the groupism, the student-teacher favoritisms.
At 151 pages, the book is a rapid-fire chill ride. Enjoy it!
Jaya pens a fast-moving thriller-horror story that doesn’t slack or disappoint. Every chapter is happening (literally), keeps one hooked and excited for the next chapter. Despite a mere 104 pages, the book has precise character sketches.
Varun and Anandi are much in love couple on a vacation/honeymoon. When wifey starts showing an upped sexual drive, smoky red eyes and a growing physical transformation Varun is horror struck. He and Anandi’s sister valiantly set off on an expedition to uncover the jigsaw puzzle put into their lap.
Its protagonists make a lasting impression- whether it be the stuntman who transforms from faithful husband to lover, from a vacationer to a seeker of truth, from a man in love to a man in mourning. Quite a surprise package this. An ending that leaves a bittersweet taste.
I always nurtured a soft spot for Indra, him being Arjun’s Dad. I was left puzzled by how casually Indra is laughed off, – and yet multiple passages in Mahabharat cite him as a benchmark of excellence, by describing a great warrior as ‘ fierce as Indra himself.’
This glaring contradiction indicated a vast abyss where his aura got diluted/distorted- whether due to time or by design. This book finally vindicates the real Indra in all his gut and glory.
Mr Utkarsh delves deep and wide, deftly interweaving folk tales with fiction into a coherent sequence of Indra’s life. He highlights the merits of Indra – his power games, his war strategies, his ambition, his friendships. As also his weakness for soma and stree. His constant tussles with the brahmin cadre, some whom he comes to admire (Dadhichi) while some others who use, abuse & dispose him at will.
His love-hate relation with the wily Vishnu (ahem!). A sequel in the making?
A neat read. A much-needed analysis of Indra.
Author: Utkarsh Patel (A lecturer of comparative mythology at the University of Mumbai and is a guest faculty in many other academic institutions across the country. He is an author of mythological fiction. He is also a founder member of ‘The Mythology Project’ (www.themythologyproject.com), which explores our rich cultural heritage through archival collections and by researching living myths and traditions.
Utkarsh regularly conducts workshops on various world mythologies—Greek, Mesopotamian and Norse—in addition to the epics of India, particularly the Ramayana and its myriad versions. Utkarsh is a TEDx speaker. He is also regularly invited to speak on various mythological subjects, with an emphasis on the interpretation of mythological characters and incidents, feminism, management and other topics, at various literary forums and festivals, organizations, etc.