The Kauravas had made a fateful error. Lusting after their cousin's kingdom, they underestimated young Abhimanyu's determination and ability to defend it. Brilliantly distilled in this handsome and much-loved Pandava prince were his father Arjuna's courage, Lord Krishna's wisdom and the patience, strength and gentle humility of his uncles. Even as he thwarted his enemies ambitions, Abhimanyu earned their grudging admiration and a very special place in the saga of the Mahabharata.
A vivid summary of the entire memoir of the brave-lion, with lovely illustrations, this book never failed to hook me each time I pick it. Kamala Chandrakant's ACK on Abhimanyu has been my regular page-turner since childhood. I've read this for about say, 100+ times.
Uncle Pai's curated arts merit an honor. I've personally tried to sketch out some of those arts.
The story plot maintained the original script, having no fictional characters or confusion on who did Abhimanyu's final blow to the ground on the 13th day of Kurukshetra.
Everything's fine about the book, except for its title. Abhimanyu was not the star-crossed prince. No nephew of Krishna, Son of Arjuna or the prince of Pandava line could be one. Rather, the title could have been something confident about him. It's not appreciable to shut the reader with the title!
This is an absolute re-readable material that will render the same effect as you get in the first trial.
A raging battle...encirclement of forces...a break out point identified...a warrior willing to lead in the face of almost impossible odds...a center peel to allow forces encircled to reform...suppressive fire from the finest archer on the battlefield...this is the story of Abhimanyu! Amazing tale of war and sacrifice that is both exciting and moving. Think of Abhimanyu as an Indian version of Achilles - and you are there!
Best to read to kids. Effective strips. Nice way the srevise the forgotten heroes of such epic tales. Loved the back story and the climax for a short read