Raavan: Enemy of Aryavarta

Raavan: Enemy of Aryavarta is the seventh book of Amish Tripathi, sixth book of Amishverse, and third book of Ram Chandra Series. [1] It chronicles the life of Ravan until the time he kidnaps Sita.[2][3] The book was released on 1 July 2019 and published by Westland.[4]

Raavan: Enemy of Aryavarta
AuthorAmish Tripathi
CountryIndia
LanguageEnglish
GenreMythological fiction
PublisherWestland Publications
Publication date
1 July 2019
Media typePrint (paperback, hardback)
ISBN9388754085

Plot

Ravaan was the first child of Maharishi Vishrava. He was power hungry from childhood. He was born a naga but it was kept secret from others in his tribe. He is enamored by the Kanyakumari, who asks Raavan to be a better person. When Raavan's brother is born a naga, the nine year old Ravaan along with his maternal uncle Mareech, has to fight with his tribe to keep his baby brother alive. They eventually flee and after their maternal family also disowns them, they go to Vaidyanath to meet the Kanyakumari. There they are informed that, the Kanyakumari has changed.

They reach the southern part of India. Due to the Khastriya community being in power, the Vaishyas are less influential in the Sapt Sindhu. Raavan started to work as a smuggler at the tender age of ten. He provided for his mother, his brother Kumbhakarna (named as the ears of the boy resemble the Kumbha (pots)), whom he loves dearly and his maternal uncle Mareech, who stayed with him through thick & thin. Raavan was deeply in love with Kanyakumari, whose name or whereabouts he didn't know. Raavan became more powerful when he started a business by taking over Akampana's ship. They also save a girl child Samichi and the child vows to be faithful to Ravaan, her Iraiva.

During a planned attack on Krakachabah, the governor of Chilika, who has hidden his wealth from the King, Raavan once again meets Kanyakumari. Kumbhakarna, being the dutiful and loyal brother, searched for her, and found her assuming a new identity - Vedavati. She is married to Prithvi, a trader and is pregnant now. Raavan, tries to woo Vedavati but to no avail. When Vedavati and her husband are killed by the son of the village leader where they reside, for the hundi that Ravaan gave her, Ravaan and Kumbha massacred the village and Ravaan became a ruthless person, vowing to destroy the Sapt Sindhu.

Ravaan goes on to become more powerful by taking control of the trading of Lanka and becomes the general of Kubaer, the chief trader. He takes control of the money in Sapt Sindhu by defeating Dashrath, the king of Ayodhyha, at the battle of Karachapa. Lanka becomes the richest city among the Sapt Sindhu. Ravaan becomes more ruthless day by day. Kumbha, though still faithful to Ravaan, becomes distant from him, as he wants to follow his dharma. Ravaan marries Mandodari and had a son Indrajit whom he loves deeply.

Ravaan wants to marry Sita, the prime minister of Mithila, but was humiliated by underhanded tactics by Sita who wants to marry Ram. Raavan besieges Mithila with 10,000 soldiers, and Ram, the now husband of Sita, is forced to use the biological weapon Asurastra by Viswamitra, even though its use is forbidden by Lord Rudra. The Lankan army is defeated and Raavan escapes on his helicopter, Pushpak Viman.

After 13 years of waiting, Ravaan and Kumbha abduct Sita and for the very first time, they see Sita, the next Vishnu. They are horrified to discover that though Vedavati died, her daughter was saved. She grows up to be the adopted daughter of Janak, the King of Mithila.

Critical Response

Acclaimed author and journalist Gautam Chikarmane praised the book in Open The Magazine writing, “In Amish’s darkest work so far, Raavan captures this subtlety and takes you on a rollercoaster of compassion and fury, love and rage, strategy and spontaneity…Raavan is arguably the most complex villain in Indian literature, and Amish delivers one of the kind we have never met, re-imagining evil in ways we have not known.” Gautam also noted Amish’s penchant for weaving in deep philosophies (“From the physical to the philosophical, the discourse between the two, both silent as well as verbal, is beautiful, gentle, calming”) into a good story (“we are wonderstruck at Amish’s craft of storytelling”) as he wrote, “Weaving familiar characters and their stories, he uses ancient time-space landscapes to deliver modern-day lessons. From independent India’s relentless contempt for wealth creation and the choking hold of bureaucracy on its people in general to the exploration of the recent Sabarimala controversy in particular, Amish continues with his bigger motive: to make India ‘worthy of our ancestors once again’.” [5]

Tania Bhattacharya’s review of Raavan: The Enemy of Aryavarta in The National, UAE was positive. The review complemented the book as ”Racy and well-paced”, and said that this “is bound to make it a hit among fans and uninitiated readers alike.”[6]


References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.