While reading the various parvas (meaning books; there are 18 in total) in Mahabharata, you’ll experience a staggering amount of details that went into each episode, and how nicely the ends are tied up. To understand why certain warriors are killed in a certain manner—Duryodhana pointed at his thigh, suggesting Draupadi to sit there during her disrobing; Bheema kills him by destroying that very thigh—along with the causations of so many curses placed throughout the epic. Not one curse goes bland, and neither do the boons. The whole story is a tight ship held together by human reasoning and divine interventions. We are easily amazed by Harry Potter, LOTR and GoT—and we should be, because without the flight of imagination bestowed upon us by literature, our species is quite literally robotic—but when you read the sheer epicness of Mahabharata, its generational intrigues and whatnot, the intellectual capacity of every character that speaks (without interruption), you are bound to wonder: is it humanly possible to replicate another masterpiece like this? I don’t think so.
What piece of literature did you read on Mahabharata before penning down this blog? I want to know because I haven't read that kunti n karna having feet resemblance anywhere before
I sent that smoking part to my friend who smokes and he felt so understood reading it. Also, would really like to play chess with you some time. What's your chess.com id?
What piece of literature did you read on Mahabharata before penning down this blog? I want to know because I haven't read that kunti n karna having feet resemblance anywhere before
I sent that smoking part to my friend who smokes and he felt so understood reading it. Also, would really like to play chess with you some time. What's your chess.com id?