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A Naxal renegade elopes with the wife of the protagonist Mahendra Chamar who is supposedly dead for him after a police encounter. Other Naxals kill both.
Years later the unmindful killing helps Mahendra to see through the stones, the reality which is opaque.
The book goes deep inside the mythical lands where magic is a part of life, where a nun leaves the church to raise the son of Maoist, where revenge of a landlord leads to unthinkable scale of killings of innocents., and where a former armed guerilla transcends all barriers to become a `god`.
Meanwhile, within the Red army there is debate on links with the LTTE and the need for sophisticated arms. There is struggle for control over organisation in which guns play a vital rote.
A suspense- filled account of real-life happenings in some parts of Maoist-affected rural India.
Born in 1964 in Calcutta, Diptendra Raychauduri is a senior journalist. While reporting on Left politics, he undertook numerous trips to impoverished rural areas to understand why people take up arms. He used most of his vacations to stay in Naxalites infested areas to bring this novel as close to the reality as possible. Such is the power of his expression that while meandering through the various turns of India`s rural landscape, the reader gets directly transformed to the Naxal lands
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