Author – Amish Tripathi
In a broken Ayodhya bled dry by Raavan’s shadow, a tormented prince named Ram rises with Sita and his brothers to reclaim justice, love, and his divine destiny.
First Published Date – 13, May 2015
Language – English
Pages # – 354
My Rating – 3/5
My Reading List # – 38
Genres – Mythology, Fiction, Fantasy, Indian Literature, Historical Fiction, Amish, India, Novels, Adventure, Historical
Famous quotes from book : A fool is worshipped in his home. A chief is worshipped in his village. A king is worshipped in his kingdom. A knowledgeable person is worshipped everywhere.
Story Brief (No Spoilers) :
Ram Rajya. A flawless dream, forged at a brutal cost. And he was the one who paid it. 3400 BCE. India stands fractured. Ayodhya reels from war, its scars still raw. Raavan, the demon King of Lanka, does not conquer with armies but with commerce, draining wealth, dignity, and hope from the Sapt Sindhu lands. Poverty festers. Corruption spreads. The people yearn for a saviour, unaware that he already walks among them.
He is the prince they doubted, scarred by exile and scorn. Ram.
Even when his own people wound him, Ram loves his land. Even when the world bends, he stands upright for the law. With his brothers and his Sita beside him, he faces the gathering storm, one man against a rising chaos. Can Ram rise above the stains cast upon his name? Will Sita’s love give him strength when the burden grows unbearable? Can he confront Raavan, the demon who shattered his childhood? And will he claim the destiny of Vishnu that waits in his shadow?
Step into a sweeping epic with Amish’s celebrated Ram Chandra Series.
My Experience with Book :
Below is powered by solely my experience with book, zero sponsorship, zero bribe, not even a bookmark involved (forget about free copy of book).
I went in carrying a sky-high hope, and that was my first mistake. No matter how much I pushed myself, I simply couldn’t sink into this story. A few moments did shimmer, but most of the time it felt like walking through a shadow of the Ramayan, only rough around the edges and strangely hollow.
What surprised me most was the excess. I usually crave richer world-building, yet here it felt heavy, almost suffocating, as if the story was buried under its own details instead of lifted by them.
I’ve truly enjoyed Amish’s earlier work, especially The Shiva Trilogy, so this one stung more than I expected. It just wasn’t my book. Still, a small spark of curiosity remains, and I’ll pick up the next installment, hoping it might rekindle what was missing.
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