'This riddle can end in two ways: speech and defeat, or silence and death.' Vetaal and Vikram is a playful retelling of one of India's most celebrated cycles of stories. The narrative of King Vikram and the Vetaal is located within the Kathasaritsagara, an eleventh-century Sanskrit text. The Vetaal who is neither living nor dead is a consummate storyteller, and Vikram is a listener who can neither speak nor stay silent. Together they are destined to walk a labyrinth of stories in the course of a moonless night in a cremation ground. In 1870, eleven of the Vetaal's stories were adapted to English by the famed scholar-explorer Richard Francis Burton who tailored them to his audience's gothic taste. Vetaal and Vikram is a contemporary response that includes Burton within its storytelling folds. Fantastical and delightful, this retelling dissolves the lines between speaker and listener, desire and duty, life and death.
Gayathri Prabhu Books
Gayathri Prabhu writes with a keen eye for psychological nuance and social commentary, exploring the complexities of human relationships and the search for identity within her novels. Her prose is lauded for its incisiveness and poetic language, drawing readers into the internal lives of her characters. Prabhu's work frequently delves into themes of memory, narrative, and the transformative power of stories. Her unique voice and profound meditations on the human experience mark her as a significant contemporary author.
