



And not to forget, Karthik and Ganesh are added into the story-line adding spices along with the usual ingredients, Sati, Veerbadhra, Krittika, Bagirath, Parvateswar, Suryavanshis, Chandravanshis and the Nagas. As the secrets are revealed, friends becomes foes and foes are categorized as alliances. Shiva seeks justice for the death of his friend Brihaspathi, and as fate unfolds, he travels to Panchavati, the land of Nagas through the dense Sundarbans & Dhandakaranya led by the Nagas queen and the Lord Of People. more o believe in Lord Ram's ways of ruling, saivism or Shiva Puran and that intrigued me to proceed with the sequel.And it did not disappoint me, not even a bit of it. _/\_As I already mentioned, this book is strictly not for those wh. Review 2: The second novel in Amish's Shiva Trilogy series and it steals the show by revealing the most shocking yet pleasant tight-lipped remains of The Immortals Of Meluha. I am willing to forgo my obsession with good English just for the intrigue of the story.Would recommend it to anyone obsessed with history, mythology and fantasy. I'm buying "The Oath of the Vayuputras" immediately, hoping that it will be even better. Language is no better than the first one. Loved all the twists, pace was taut, but got sluggish towards the end, all for the buildup for a cliffhanger for the third book. Review 1: This is way better than the first one.
