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Tuesday, 1 October 2019

The Ramayana Secret-Anurag Chandra

Book: The Ramayana Secret
Author: Anurag Chandra
Publisher: Om Books International

Perspectives make a lot of difference on how we contemplate any event or a story. Often, what we see is just one side of the story, right?


The Ramayana Secret by Anurag Chandra is afresh retelling of the epic. In his story, Anurag has taken the concept that there exist 2 civilizations on the earth, one on the outer surface and another inside the Earth, called the Agartha. The civilization in Agartha is very well developed as compared to the one on the outer Earth by virtue of their longer existence. Originating from the same ancestors, Agartha uses emissaries to communicate with the outer Earth and provides them with knowledge so that society can progress. As the advanced civilization, they are the guardians of the knowledge of the Gods and many other advanced technologies that are revealed only to the people who have achieved the highest order of spiritual awakening to avoid them falling into the wrong hands. For years, the two civilizations had a peaceful co-existence until Ravana comes along and the divine scripts come into his custody by happenstance. Rama is then tasked with the mission to retrieve the scripts and bring it to the rightful owners. What happens next, forms the plot of the book. The Ramayana Secret is Rama’s story, not as we know it, but as it happened.

The plot of the book is very good, and it moves with a comfortable pace with emphasis on the points at the right places. Anurag has created an extremely detailed story with the details picked from the original epic but adding the right condiments into it to provide a feasible alternative plot line. He has aligned the presence of all the major events of the epic into this plotline with a plausible back story. Be it the story of Ahalya or the story of Shabari, each of them has been dealt with in proper accuracy. The description of the Inner Earth is fairly detailed and helps create a picture of how it might look had it existed. The story of the rise of Ravana, Rama’s swayamvara with Sita, the crossing of the ocean and the origins of Hanuman are some of the highlights that stood out for me.

Talking about the characters, the prominent characters have been given a proper backstory that fits in with the plot. There are no chinks that can be identified, and sufficient clues are provided to create a distinct persona of each of the characters. The thing that caught my attention, though, was the epiphany of Ravana towards the end of the plot and I would like to specially mention this as it shows how well the author has delved into the human psyche.

In the quest to retrieve the divine scripts, the author has convinced me to handover 4/5 scripts that I have.

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