I love to read and I’m not a great fan of Goodreads, although I do have an account there. In this section, I’m going to document my reading, and treat this as an Archive page, of sorts. I read physical books and digital, but these days I’m predominantly leaning towards reading physically.
I use a Boox Palma and a Boox Tab Mini C for reading. I’ve installed koreader on them, and on all my devices and I load books using calibre. I hope to document more of my reading process sometime, but here I’d like to record what I read.
GN Devy - Mahabharata: The Epic and the Nation
Thoughts I found this book when looking for a copy of G.N. Devy’s other book (India: A Linguistic Civilization). I read through it in a sitting because it was quite short (I’d say it’s about 180 pages in length). Devy’s work has always been hard to read, not because he’s a poor writer - he is excellent - but because it’s dense writing, efficient to a fault.
This book is a little different, perhaps because I’m familiar with the themes of the Mahabharata from reading the Debroy translation of the BORI Critical Edition.
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Robert Jordan - The Shadow Rising
I started reading this on 10 April 2024. I’ve been having a lot of fun re-reading the Wheel of Time. It must be over 10 years since my last re-read.
Dear Mr. Debroy
📝 Note The following is the content of handwritten letter I sent to Mr. Debroy dated Feb 12th, 2017. I’ve reproduced it in its entirety here. Dear Mr. Debroy,
I’d planned on writing this letter a few weeks ago. I drafted it a month ago but I wanted to rewrite it entirely because I wasn’t entirely happy with the first draft. I do not know when this will reach you, but I believe in our postal service. Thank you for giving me your address by the way.
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Reading the Mahabharata by the Tungabhadra - Day 20
This journey has been relieving. I have done all that I set out to do. I came for a larger purpose, to start writing once again. It has been too long, and I have been scared of something.
Fear is a gripping thing, and it has defined a lot in my life. My closest friends know how much I fear some things. When I think about the thing I fear most, my palms sweat, and I begin speaking at five times my normal pace.
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Reading the Mahabharata by the Tungabhadra - Day 19
The End.
The 1008 names of Shiva, the 1000 names of Vishnu, the Anu Gita and the Purusha Suktam. Bhishma leaves Dharmaraja with this and other words of Dharma. And then, he leaves his body and Ganga mourns her son.
As the sun sets on my sojourn here at Hampi, so does the sun set on the story of the Kurus. Dhritarashtra leaves for the forest, losing his life to a fire. Thirty six years after the war, the Yadavas fall, and Krishna too dies. Maddened at the loss of the Best of the Vrishnis, the Pandavas head north. One by one, Panchali and Yudhishthira’s brothers fall.
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Reading the Mahabharata by the Tungabhadra - Day 18
Today I went to read the Mahabharata by the Tungabhadra, and I did.
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Reading the Mahabharata by the Tungabhadra - Day 17
The empty temples scare me. They stand here, stripped of their purpose by the invaders from Golkonda, Bijapur and Delhi. The idols are destroyed, nothing remains except the stories. Some temples don’t even have the stories. Guides make stuff up, they tell unsuspecting travellers that there’s some story here. There is, but it isn’t the story the guides are feeding them.
Hampi enthralls me on a level that I couldn’t begin to understand as a child. I feel at peace, sitting under a tree, not realizing that a spider was climbing on my arm. My skin has turned coppery in colour, my aunts tell me that it’ll take months for this tan to go. I will take that as an indicator then. The colour of my skin should tell me if it has been too long since I’ve visited Hampi.
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Reading the Mahabharata by the Tungabhadra - Day 16
Today I went to read the Mahabharata by the Tungabhadra, and I did.
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Reading the Mahabharata by the Tungabhadra - Day 15
Today I went to read the Mahabharata by the Tungabhadra, and I did.
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Reading the Mahabharata by the Tungabhadra - Day 14
My very first introduction to the Mahabharata was one of two comics, from Amar Chitra Katha, bought at the railway station in Mumbai, over twenty years ago.
It was either the story of Karna or the story of Abhimanyu, I cannot recall which one it was. I remember reading both when I was younger and being enthralled with the battles they fought. Both, naturally are tragedies, extremely famous.
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