Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Book Review: The Palace of Illusions, by Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni

So I was stuck at an airport today for over four hours (ironically in the city where Divakaruni is based), and had this book with me. I, like most people of Indian origin, had heard and read stories from the Mahabharata, the epic Hindu poem detailing the rise and the fall of the Kaurava and Pandava dynasties in India.

Among the more memorable parts of the epic are the final battle between the Kaurava and Pandava armies, and the court scene with Draupadi, which eventually leads to this war. That was probably the extent of my knowledge of Draupadi - before I opened this book. Once I started reading the book, which is written from Draupadi's viewpoint, with stories woven in as flashbacks, I found myself unable to put the book down. The way the life of Draupadi is described, from her birth from the fire, to her youth, her marriage, her longing for Karna, to her final end - with her commentary on the events unfolding around her - is spellbinding. If you check Wikipedia, you will see that the author has taken pains to maintain the facts as stated in Mahabharata - but embellished them with magnificent detail and prose.

Some passages hinted that this book may be an allegory - " I wasn't ready to let go of my life. How amazing it seemed to me with its victories, its adventures, its moments of glory. Even the shame that had struck like hot iron, branding revenge into my brain, seemed suddenly precious in its uniqueness. I wanted to live it all again - with more wisdom this time!.."

...Are we really like Abhimanyu, stuck in the Chakravyuha, with no way of getting out?


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