About the
Book
The Seeds
of War, Book Two in Ashok Bankers MBA series, introduces us to the elder
protagonists of the epic, as well as some of the great loves and lusts,
friendships and enmities, politics and self-sacrifice that will lay the seeds
that will eventually fester and erupt into the mother of all wars. At first it
may seem that the journey is the reward, with seemingly unrelated love stories,
fantastical tales of exploits in the heavenly realms, divine pacts and demoniac
trysts. But it soon becomes evident that all these form a tapestry revealing
the grandeur and glamour of the Kuru Bharata race itself, the growing
descendants of the original tribe that established perhaps the greatest and
oldest human civilization ever known in recorded history.
My view
After an
amazing first book of MBA Mahabharata series “The Forest of Stories”, Ashok K.
Banker writes "The Seeds of War", in a similar fervor. If you haven’t
read the first book, you can still read "The Seeds of War” as there is no
connection in terms of characters or flow of knowledge. But if you have, it
will only add to knowing his style of writing that has completely changed since
the “Ramayana” series.
For everyone
who has curiosity about Indian Mythology and especially Mahabharata, this one
is a best buy. I have watched Mahabharata twice and heard many tiny stories out
of the huge book, but this book offered more than the info that I already knew.
Ramayana was
easily to remember, to me and my cousins, due to the less number of characters
and the story being focused on a small subject. I think that is the reason the
author linked his Ramayana series volume to volume. This epic venture is
written like a collection of stories. This one is the beginning. Of war. What
led, who led, and how it led, to the planting seeds, which resulted in, War.
Ashok K.
Banker makes this an enjoyable read, by simplifying the characters. There is an
instance where I fell in love with Kacha, the son of Brihaspati, only due to
his style of narration. Best part of the book has to be love of Shantanu and
Ganga, with fascinating particulars made me feel I was a live witness of the
incident.
Author
has segregated this book into nine pakshas which in turn have many chapters.
My favorite
one being paksha five "Shantanu and Ganga - A love story written on
water" Why? When
queen of the river Ganga desires king Pratipa, he tells her about how she sat
on his right thigh and not the left one. Right thigh is a place reserved for daughters,
daughter-in-laws and grand-daughters. Left thigh is actually a proper place for
a lover. This is the amount of detailing expected from an author who dares to
recreate an epic. That too Vyaasa's epic.
I
particularly should mention Dolphins leaping while Ganga leaves. Dolphins
existed only in Northern tales for me. Indian stories only had deer’s and
peacocks and rabbits.
When Pratipa
tells Shantanu about him choosing a girl for him already, son agrees. Indeed
got a smile. It’s a weird concept but the beauty of narration makes the
situation completely acceptable.
The union
too left me spellbound. We often listen to stories how dominant the male part
was those days.
But in
Shantanu and Ganga's love it wasn't. She never wanted him to ask her who she
was and from where she had arrived. He was not even to question her or speak
harshly with her. She asked complete freedom in turn she would turn his every
desire a reality.
It wasn't marriage according to Shantanu but autocracy. But she wanted him as much as he
desired her. The union according to author was "bliss"
This love,
strange love, where Ganga loves Shantanu even before he was born is what makes
this paksha very special.
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1 comments:
An absolutely fantastic book by Ashok Banker. Keeps you hooked till the last page.
Everyone knows about the Pandavas and the Kauravas but not many know about the illustrious Puru lineage. The book is a wonderful insight into that.
The Mahabharata is all about people and Ashok Banker has managed to narrate the deepest of emotions [e.g. Bhishma and Amba's confrontation in the night after he abducts her] with the most simplest of words. His narrative makes you empathize with the characters.
Simple language, fine use of words and an amazing narrative keeps you hooked on till the last page. A must must read!
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