Blurb:
"Thousands
of years ago, Indian Yogis possessed the knowledge to obtain the weapons of the
gods. However, this knowledge could only be transferred from a Guru to his
disciple by word of mouth. In today’s world, one mystic, who calls himself
Guruji still possesses this knowledge and is using it to empower an innocent
person’s life. Only, this empowerment could be a deception and the innocent
person is a thirteen-year-old boy with a stutter... In this intertwining tale,
an ambitious yet unsuccessful Shankar, in search of his identity, is
manipulated to embark on a never-told-before fantasy tale; only to rediscover
the father he never knew and unmask the mystical Guruji. Amidst this
confounding concoction of ancient myths, deluding personas and dispersed
emotions, will Shankar ever be able to separate fact from fiction and find his
true identity?"
My
Review:
Divyastra
means a weapon. All the mythology lovers will love the book.
Narration
and Plot are nice.
Characters
are nicely built.
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