The Mahabharata is the more\n recent of India's two great epics and by far the longest. First composed by\n Maharishi Vyasa in verse, it has come down the centuries in the timeless oral\n tradition of guru and sishya, profoundly influencing the history, culture and\n art of not only the Indian subcontinent but most of south-east Asia. At\n 100,000 couplets it is seven times as long as the lliad and the Odyssey\n combined: far and away the greatest recorded epic known to man.The\n Mahabharata is the very Book of Life: in its variety, majesty and also its\n violence and tragedy. It has been said that nothing exists that cannot be\n found within the pages of this awesome legend. The epic describes a great war\n of some 5000 years ago and the events that led to it. The war Kurushetra sees\n ten million Kshatriyas slain and brings the Dwapara Yuga to an end and ushers\n in a new and sinister age: this present kali Yuga, modern times.At the heart\n of the Mahabharata nestles the Bhagavad Gita, the Songs of God. Senayor\n Ubhayor madhye, between two teeming armies, Krishna expounds the eternal\n dharma to his warrior of light, Arjuna. At one level all the restless action\n of the Mahabharata is a quest for the Gita and its scared stillness. After\n the carnage, it is the Gita that survives, immortal lotus floating upon the\n dark waters of desolation: the final secret!With its magnificent cast of\n characters, human, demonic and divine and its riveting narrative, the\n Mahabharata continues to enchant readers and scholar the world over. This new\n rendering brings the epic to the contemporary reader in sparki8ng modern\n prose. It brings alive all the excitement, magic and grandeur of the original\n – for our times.
Ramesh Menon was born in 1951 in New Delhi. He attended St Columba's and St Xavier's High Schools and St Stephen's College. He has lived and worked in Delhi, Hong Kong, Bangalore and Jakarta, and now lives in Kodaikanal in Tamil Nadu. He is the author, among others, of Krishna: Life and Song of the Blue God and the Hunt for K, a novel and the Mahabharata: A Modern Rendering.
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