Sunday 26 January 2020

Supercop of Aryavrat-Mithilesh Kumar

Book: Supercop of Aryavrat
Author: Mithilesh Kumar
Publisher: Authors Upfront

Retelling of the epics is a rage today, and everyone is trying their hands on this genre today. We have seen multiple retellings and multiple POVs of the various epics in the recent times, and some very amazing at that.


Supercop of Aryavrat by Mithilesh Kumar is the story of Krishna, as it happened, from his point of view. Starting in the year 3102 BC, it is basically a flashback story of how things unfolded around the events of the Mahabharata. Its basically the story of a “Supercop” who is the go-to man for anything that happens in Aryavrat and he is the one to handle it.

Supercop of Aryavrat by Mithilesh Kumar is stuck somewhere between a retelling and a paraphrasing of the epics. The author created the character of Krishna as a human but forgot that he was treating him as one towards the end. The book is basically a compilation of the tales of Krishna that everyone has heard, with a twist here and there. The storytelling is quite bland with no ups or down to excite the reader. There is almost nothing new that this story adds to our understanding of the epics, neither does it offer a radically approach. The story feels very stretched and some of the parts are quite unnecessary for me. The events happening one after the other do not have specified breaks, which tends to confuse the reader as to when the scene actually changes. The ending was very abrupt and I feel it did not do much justice to the story as a whole.

While talking about characters, the book revolves around Krishna, the man, the myth and the mythology and the author has taken various instances to show various facets of his life. He has critically analysed the character of Yudhisthir which I felt was one good thing about the book and presented a different take to it. All the other characters carry a similar vibe as the epics and thus not much to detail about them in a review.

Overall, the book is recommended if you would like to know more about Krishna in detail, and not as a preferred fiction read.

The book scores a 2.75 on 5 for me.

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