No More Sea: When Rama Meets Krishna Audiolibro Por Parthasarathy V arte de portada

No More Sea: When Rama Meets Krishna

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No More Sea: When Rama Meets Krishna

De: Parthasarathy V
Narrado por: Virtual Voice
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No More Sea: When Rama Meets Krishna is a luminous third‑person literary novel about Arjun, a South Indian Brahmin boy born beneath a vow at a Sufi shrine and raised between a silent engineer‑father’s precision and a musical grandmother’s tambura drone. Named along two paths—Arjun for duty and Kanha for play—he learns the mathematics of time, the grammar of obedience, and the secret weather of sound. A ritual wound to his left eye breaks his sun‑bound discipline open to moonlight, revealing doors in the “Solar Cage” he once polished as a virtue. Across red‑stone courtyards and steel‑town lanes, under eclipses and kitchen lamps, women arrive as seasons—actress, yogini, traveler—each moving the furniture in his mind toward a city with gates that do not slam. Untying the thread at the white tomb becomes a grammar for living: tie with meaning, untie with timing, repair with mercy. Humiliation by the sea teaches him to build on ground; scripture turns into architecture; ragas become street maps; and work ripens from factory to orchard. By the time forty‑eight slim books line a shelf that bends, the boy of two names has learned to carry a brimming bowl between Rama’s order and Krishna’s lila without spilling. The novel sings in quiet, exact prose—tambura as horizon, violin as street, watch as honest pump—about threads and thresholds, fathers who fold shirts instead of hugging, lamps that behave, and a city within that finally aligns with the world outside. It is a testament to discipline that grows a door, play that learns measure, and a promise kept without breaking its knot. In the end, the river inside the city flows without noise, and the city sleeps without fear of sea.
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