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Have you
ever tried to roll the universe up into a ball and express its ultimate
truth in 150 pages of flawless English prose? Such was the task allotted
to Namita Gokhale, Bulbul Sharma, Royina Grewal, Nanditha Krishna and
Pavan K. Varma, who have made valiant efforts to encompass Shiva, the
Devi, Ganesha, Vishnu and Krishna in five small books.
The
books, attractively designed and illustrated, fit comfortably into the
hand and have been created to make perfect small gifts and easy reading
for those with busy lives. They retell the better and the less well-known
myths of the deities, list their many names and attributes, include some
of the great devotional poetry they have inspired and describe the main
temples where the deities are worshipped, as well as popular festivals.
They also give us a chance to remember minor figures like Trijata, the
demon who is worshipped around the time of Kartik Poornima because she
was the friend who gave hope to Sita when she was in despair in Lanka.
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THE BOOK OF VISHNU
By Nanditha Krishna
Viking
Price: Rs 195
Pages: 149 |
THE BOOK OF KRISHNA
By Pavan
K. Varma
Viking
Price: Rs 195
Pages: 164
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THE BOOK OF SHIVA
By Namita Gokhale
Viking
Price: Rs 195
Pages: 130
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THE BOOK OF GANESHA
By Royina Grewal
Viking
Price: Rs 195
Pages: 146
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However, there are pitfalls in this pocket format. In The Book of Shiva,
Namita Gokhale rightly points out that the gods are alive in India. Unfortunately,
by including in quick succession a profusion of complex myths, she succeeds
in squeezing out some of this life, and she is not alone in this. In the
whole series, the desire to make the English up-to-date and accessible
results in some odd translations and inappropriate usage, and occasionally
historical theory is presented as undisputed fact.
Bulbul
Sharma is perhaps the series' most natural storyteller. She starts her
book on a personal note with a description of her grandmother who was
steeped in the traditions of the Devi and, like many women before her,
a repository and guardian of traditional wisdom and culture. Sadly Sharma,
so creative herself, in her chapter on Saraswati does not consider the
goddess as the invisible river of creativity in which we all flow. She
does include some sublime hymns and striking dialogues, particularly one
where Lakshmi addresses Shiva and reveals the unity of the supreme being
by telling Shiva how she discovered that He and Vishnu are none other
than one and the same. The theme of unity in the divine flows through
all five books, not only the oneness of Vishnu-Shiva, but of Shiva-Shakti,
Vishnu and his consorts and the longing of the human soul to merge with
the infinite.
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THE BOOK OF DEVI
By Bulbul Sharma
Viking
Price: Rs 195
Pages: 162 |
Interpretation, of course, is the key to understanding myth. The tradition
of retelling myths in India, where religious teachers take small incidents
and expand on them, bringing out their immediate significance to us, is
one reason why the gods are alive today. The compression of myths, which
the format of these books demands, runs counter to this life-giving tradition.
Only occasionally do the authors have a chance to introduce their own
and other commentators' interpretations. Pavan Varma does this most consistently,
but then dealing with just one incarnation of Vishnu-Krishna-he has
more space to do so. His portrait of Krishna as Lila Purushottam is delightful,
though even he can be seen beating a hasty retreat from the complexities
of the Bhagvad Gita.
These stories of the gods display the variety of the Hindu pantheon,
but at the same time each of the deities is presented as the supreme God.
Max Muller coined the term "kathenotheism" for this worship
of many gods but only one at a time, enabling devotees to approach the
supreme reality in different ways at different moments. This unique aspect
of Hinduism is undoubtedly another reason the gods are alive today.
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