The Immortals of Meluha by Amish Tripathi: Book Review

Reviewed for: Self-interest

Title: The Immortals of Meluha

Author: Amish Tripathi (His Debut Book)

Publisher: Westland

Category: Historical Fiction

Pages: 324

At Goodreads

Connect: Facebook, Author Amish

Buy ‘The Immortals of Meluha’ in English, Hindi or Tamil from Amazon

I cannot find a better day to write a review for this book, The Immortals of Meluha. How apt to do it on Shivaratri! It was my childhood myth that Lord Shiva is a very busy and powerful God that He will not have time to heed to my prayers. So I refrained from having a connection with Him as a God. Not to exaggerate, this book has changed that stupidity of my bygone days. Now I feel He is as gentle and heeding as any of my other favourites.

Om Nama Shiva ya!

Read Review of The Secret of the Nagas here.

In spite of being the very first gift from my H, I ignored this book for a while. Until an anti-books friend was in praise for this book! Written by Amish Tripathi, this book is about Lord Shiva’s life as a human on Earth. Most of the characters are already familiar to us as they form our ancient mythology. Having mentioned Lord Shiva and mythology, it might give an impression of an old historical, religious and boring book. But that’s not the truth.

The immortals of Meluha  is unbelievably written to the interest of the present day readers. Lord Shiva often utters “Shit” and “Damn it” and Rishi Brahaspati conducts scientific experiments. So you can imagine the fun-filled mythology that is presented in this book.

What can you expect?

It is evident that the author has taken personal interest to do good amount of research into ancient Indian lifestyles with a special note to the time periods. And if you are reading this book, you are in the Indus valley civilization period. Thanks to the map of ancient India at the back of the cover page. It was significant to get a mental illustration of where the author is taking us on his travel. Vivid descriptions take us live to the Indus valley civilization – their constructions, planning of their towns, their laws, people, their simplicity, unity, honesty and lifestyle – a dream to our chaotic lives! Woman can be warriors, can re-marry, can dress explicitly. Men need not be fighters. They can choose to do what they like.

Few other interesting reads:

  • The author’s subjective belief of the Indian origin to the Tamils is new and surprising.
  • The unbiased reflection on the then caste divisions into brahmins, Kshatriyas, vaishyas and sudras is amazing throughout the book.
  • The scientific explanations about the human body mechanisms is a good read.
  • Explaining Shiva’s psyche through his dreams is a realistic approach.
  • The Pandits giving guidance to a confused Shiva are nice parts.
  • And to my great surprise another legend, Lord Ram, being Shiva’s hero.

Surpassing all the above are the war scenes. The final war was one part that was gripping and you will not be willing to keep the book down at the scene. All the other petty wars were equally enthralling. When I say war scenes, every blow is described, mind it.

What I’ve withheld so far for the final touch, is their love and romance – Shiva’s and Sati’s! Shiva has been portrayed as a passionate lover. In fact in the few initial chapters, Shiva’s everyday duty was only keeping a track of Sati and do unimpressive things to impress her 😆 Sati’s unyielding and strong character makes her different from all the other I am-too-gentle types of heroines. He adores her, protects her, sheds blood and tears for her – and in fact brings her back from death-bed!

amish tripathi

What’s so unique about The Immortals of Meluha?

Everybody knows the power of Lord Shiva. Everybody knows that He can do everything. Everybody knows He is strong. However, here the author has had the courage to introduce Shiva as a uncoothe tribe who:

  • doesn’t know his own potential.
  • is in search of his destiny.
  • goes behind the heroine, like an Indian film hero.
  • doesn’t accept to take a new responsibility.
  • carries fear and guilt of his past.
  • is an emotional human who can cry.
  • is uncertain about what he has done and what he needs to do.

And thereby signifying that every human is the same. With hidden potentials and unsure of his destiny, every human is capable of living a life of a Mahadev.

Har Har Mahadev! – What Shiva finally discovers!

Another peculiar style of the author is this – When you read about a previously introduced character in the subsequent chapters, there will not be a direct mention to the name. That is, in every chapter, the familiar characters will be re-introduced with the same descriptions. At a first read, it will appear like a new character. But it is up to the readers to match the descriptions and discover who it is.

The final twist – unexpected and totally contradictory to what has been told in all the previous chapters. That’s where the author has actually brought forth what exactly he wanted to convey in this book. An answer to the question who is good and who is evil!

What next?

Buy all three books of Shiva Trilogy from Amazon

The sequel, ‘The Secret of the Nagas’ is already in my hands. The suspense created in the first book about the Nagas and in the last page is good enough a reason to continue with the second one in the Shiva trilogy series.

Happy Shivratri!

Photo Courtesy

The Immortals of Meluha –  http://shivatrilogy.com

Amish Tripathi – Wikipedia

If you are a publisher, an author or a reader and wish to get your book or a book of your choice to be reviewed in Pages from Serendipity, please send a message to nandhini.pfs@gmail.com

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Visit the Book Reviews page to read review archives

14 Replies to “The Immortals of Meluha by Amish Tripathi: Book Review”

  1. Hi,

    This book has been such an amazing journey of the life of Lord Shiva. 🙂 I finished the book yesterday and I thoroughly enjoyed every part of it. The love scenes between Sati and Shiva, how he holds on to her in faith even at her deathbed – that really brought tears in my eyes. In all, Amish tries to convey to us that Shiva was as human as we are! Well packed and racy narrative. 🙂 Your review is precise and accurate. 🙂 Thanks for posting such a good write-up about the Immortals of Meluha!

    PS: Even I’m looking for the pdf version of Shiva Trilogy book-1. Can you help me by sending it or sharing the link if you have? Thanks. 🙂

    Regards,
    Nandhini

    1. 🙁 It happens sometimes. I remember picking up these two books The monk who sold his ferarri and The tibetan book of the dead and getting bored with the first few pages. What is popular among many may not interest everybody. Hopefully your next read would be a great one.

  2. I look for elements like mystery, adventure and action in the fantasy novels that I read. I am a big fan of Game of Thrones, Eragon and Harry Potter so when I came across INKREDIA Luwan of Brida by Sarang Mahajan, I was really impressed. It’s a fast paced fantasy book based on the story of Luwan and his sister Meg. They are being chased by deadly assassins and they don’t even know why. Their journey to safety as they evade non-human assassins is what makes this book full of adventure. Read it over a weekend and couldn’t put it down until I was done. A job well done by the author. Check out the website: https://inkredia.com/

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