![]() ![]() Only until a fancy thought competition begins, it seems, and the author starts hallucinating in her wilderness – terming it as Draupadi’s and putting the entire blame on a ‘fictional’ character’s shoulders. The Palace of Illusions, very much related to its title, is a work that describes Mahabharat, Indian history, from Draupadi’s perspective. ![]() Though her boring and repetitive and too naive language would seldom let someone take her novel seriously, let’s assume it’s serious. Okay, jokes apart, let’s consider the work by Chitra Banerjee seriously. Once the writing is done, time to cheer because people with angst against a PERFECTLY documented dharmik epic in their hearts would cheer whatever you vomit.Once the sleep goes away, begin writing in a somewhat workable language that should be too cheap to be the language of an epic.Once finished watching, relax, sleep and dream about some personal opinions concerning characters and events.It’s wonderful and the scenes are easily memorable do the same.There a few very simple steps that a novelist-to-be needs to follow in order to make something like Chitra’s work happen once again: ![]() ![]() The Palace of Illusions, a novel by Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, is a perfect recipe for anyone who is an aspiring novelist and wants to make something happen. ![]()
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