I could not go for the launch of this book at Peddar road, but had watched it on U-tube and was surprised to see the crowd that waited to enter
the store. Never in my life have I seen a book launch of such magnitude. Amish
said that during book launch of his first book, there were only his family
members and few friends had been forced to attend the event, his wife had
distributed the questions to be thrown at author during the book reading, but
popularity of those two books had changed his status and now he was known as
one of the most sought out writers.
I, like thousands others, was waiting eagerly for the third and
final episode of Shiva Trilogy.
I had liked the first two parts too. I had written the review of
‘Immortals of Mehula’ and ‘Secrets of Nagas’ on my blog
At the end of part two of Shiva Trilogy, I was left with questions such as:
What evil is he talking about? How can we destroy evil when it
does not exist by itself? Good and evil, two sides of the coin, he must visit
Panchavati, the city of Nagas to know the secret.
Shiva did reach Panchavati, I had eagerly waited for evil to
emerge, making wild guesses of putting face to the evil, was it really Nagas? If it was not Naga then who was evil?, Then suddenly it is revealed that Somras, the powerful
magic potion, which was good at first, had turn to evil and it had to be
destroyed. Then the journey to seek the help of Vayuputra began to put an end
to evil by destroying people who would not stop using Somras.
The third part, however, did not excite me as much as the other
two parts did. Maybe my expectations were too high.
However, I did like the narration of the last fight of Sati.
This excerpt made me sit at the edge as I read through the pages of her final
fight:
“Swuth didn’t approach Sati with both his curved swords. That would have been unfair according to the rules of Aten, since Sati had one sword hand. He held the sword forward in his hand. As he neared Sati, he started swinging the sword around, building it into a stunning circle of death just ahead of him, moving inexorably towards her. Even as Swuth’s sword whirred closer, Sati began to step back slowly. She suddenly thrust her sword forward quickly, deep into the ring of the circling blade of Swuth, inflicting a serious cut on the Egyptian’s shoulder. She pulled her sword back as rapidly, before Swuth’s circling blade could come back to deflect her sword. He’d never met anyone with the ability to penetrate his sword’s circle of death.”
The book title says ‘Oath of Vayuputra’ but what oath? And
Vayuputra (isn’t that supposed to be Lord Hanuman) has less than 100 pages of
fame.
The read is easy flow, so even though I had put away after
reading 200 pages of more brutal war and long sea travelling, I did return back
to finish the book.
The book did have the elements of surprise, joy and pain.