A Majestic Portrait of Krishna the Man, Not the Myth. Shri Krishna, written by the legendary Marathi author Shivaji Sawant, is not just a retelling of Lord Krishna’s life. It is a philosophical, socio-political, and deeply humanized reimagining of one of the most iconic figures in Hindu civilization.
Unlike traditional portrayals that focus on Krishna’s divine miracles, Sawant chooses to explore the man behind the myth—a thinker, a strategist, a friend, a lover, a statesman, and above all, a visionary bound by the changing tides of his era. Through Krishna, Sawant doesn’t preach religion or impose philosophy. Instead, he offers life lessons in the simplest, most grounded ways possible, without ever sounding didactic.
What makes Yugandhar especially powerful is its multi-perspective narrative. Each voice be it that of Satyaki, Arjuna, Draupadi, Daruka, Uddhava, Rukmini, or Krishna himself adds a unique lens to the world he shaped and the burdens he bore. This multi-POV format doesn't just glorify Krishna with divine hues, but allows readers to witness the man who, even amid chaos and tragedy, remained steadfast and luminous.
I had this book with me for four years. For reasons I can’t fully explain, I delayed picking it up perhaps intimidated by its depth, or simply lost in the noise of everyday life. But now that I’ve read it, I realize what a treasure I had been ignoring all this while. No review of mine can truly do justice to the magnitude of this work.
Reading Yugandhar reminded me of the poignant Sanskrit verses composed by scholar Shatavadhani R. Ganesh, who so beautifully encapsulated Krishna’s paradoxical life:
कारागारे प्रसूतिर्निजपितृविरतिः शैशवं गोपघोषे
राज्ञां मध्येऽपमानो विवसितवसतिः प्रत्यहं प्राणभीतिः ।
पत्नीभिस्तर्जनं च प्रकटितकलहो बन्धुषून्मत्तपुत्राः
सूतोद्योगश्च मृत्युश्शबरशरभवोऽप्यात्मतुष्टिस्तवाऽसीत् ॥
Born within prison walls, separated from parents at birth,
you spent your childhood among cowherds;
You were insulted by kings; constant death-threats; driven out constantly from your own land and country;
Family feuds, cantankerous wives, intoxicated sons
You had to work as a charioteer and die an insignificant death by a hunter's stray arrow,
yet you were so content, self-satisfied!
Shri Krishna(or Yugandhar)has made me sit in awe of Krishna not as an incarnation, but as a timeless embodiment of wisdom, detachment, and grace. This isn’t just a novel. It’s an experience, One that transforms the reader as much as it reveals its central character.