Enter the mythical world of Maha Vishnu and get swept up in a fast-paced and suspenseful narrative; flick through the second part of the "Blue Lotus Trilogy", which pays homage to India's magnificent mythological heritage and takes the reader on a journey into the heart of human passions; connect with some of the deeper concepts in the Gita; and get into the realm of the nothingness of profound and lasting peace.
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Here are few books from the world of mythology and spirituality to offer its readers this weekend!
The Code of Manavas
Author: Arpit Bakshi, Publisher: Rupa, Pages: 285 Book one of the Vishnu trilogy, "The Code of Manavas", is set some two million years past AD 2050, when earth as we know it ceased to exist and so did mankind. A new race, the Manavas, now exists on the erstwhile Earth, which is divided into two cities -Madhavpur and Ayudhpur.
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Sitanshu
Author: Anita Shirodkar, Publisher: The White Place, Pages: 317 Written with the classic Indian ethos, Sitanshu, the second part of the Guardians of the Blue Lotus Trilogy, pays homage to India's magnificent mythological heritage and takes the reader on a journey into the heart of human passions.
Of Hindu gods, mythology, and spirituality, these are the books you should be reading
Gita
Author: Sonal Sachdev Patel and Jemma Wayne Kattan, Publisher: Harper Collins, Pages: 99 When 11-year-old Dev's father dies, he can't stop lashing out at those he loves. Until he meets Sanjay, a sprite-like being who claims there is a battle raging inside Dev's own body.
Sanjay embarks on a perilous journey beginning in the darkest realm at the bottom of Dev's spine. Well, briefly, Gita is a classic story of good overcoming evil, through Dev and Sanjay's adventure, readers will be able to connect with some of the deeper concepts in the Gita.
Of Hindu gods, mythology, and spirituality, these are the books you should be reading
Shunya
Author: Sri M, Publisher: Westland, Pages: 225 He appears out of nowhere in a sleepy little neighbourhood in suburban Kerala. He calls himself Shunya, the zero. Who is he? A lunatic? A dark magician? A fraud? Or an avadhuta, an enlightened soul?
The novel is a meditation on the void which collapses the wall between reality and make-believe, the limited and the infinite. With its spare storytelling and profound wisdom, it leads us into the realm of "shunya", the nothingness of profound and lasting peace, the beginning and end of all things.
(With IANS Inputs)
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