REVIEW

Ashok Banker's Ramayana: Book 4: Armies of Hanuman

Written by Richard Marcus
Published June 10, 2005

In this, the fourth book of Ashok Banker's retelling of the Ramayana, Armies of Hanuman, we are reunited with our characters 13 years from the date we left them beginning their fourteen year exile. Rama, his wife Sita, and his brother Lakshman have fought alongside a motley band of outcast and outlaws against the Asur hoard for the whole time.

At the onset of the novel we learn that Rama has decided to end the war one way or another. Although still outnumbered 5-to-1, he has devised a plan that he hopes will even the odds in his favour. Although there are unexpected occurrences during the battle (the rakshasas meld together to form super beasts made up of fifty of their kind), Rama's forces eventually prevail. Rama, Sita, and Lakshman are free to to spend their final year of exile in peace.
Or so they think.

If you are someone like Rama who has successfully conquered the rakshasas at every turn, you are bound to have made some pretty bad enemies. The rest of the story is bound up in the telling of the resurrection from near death of his major foe (Ravana the king of the Asura world), and his plots for revenge on Rama.

But allies can come from many places, and in this case Rama's prowess as a military leader, and unfailing commitment to dharma (sacred duty), has attracted the attention of the vanar, a highly developed species of ape. Hanuman of the title has had Rama under observation for some time and has entertained hopes of enlisting his aid in restoring his king to his rightful throne. Through circumstances, they end up joining forces and becoming friends and allies.

In this fourth book Mr. Banker continues to do a masterful job of bringing an ancient story to life and making it accessible to those of all cultures. Again he has managed to walk the fine line of neither over-explaining concepts and beliefs to those who are unfamiliar with them, and thus boring others, while at the same time never leaving any reader in the dark. In fact, in this volume I found that, either from the knowledge I had accumulated from the earlier installments, or even cleverer integration on the author's part, the story, the characters, and the moral lessons and education were woven together even more seamlessly. Maybe it's because now that Rama and ourselves have proceeded down our paths together into maturity, we are living our teachings instead of learning them.

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Copy02-11-Richard portrait-72-4x4.jpgRichard Marcus is a long-haired Canadian iconoclast who writes reviews and opines on the world as he sees it at Leap In The Dark and Epic India Magazine.
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Ashok Banker's Ramayana: Book 4: Armies of Hanuman
Published: June 10, 2005
Type: Review
Section: Books
Filed Under: Books: Fantasy, Books: Literature and Fiction, Books: Philosophy, Books: Spirituality
Writer: Richard Marcus
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Comments

#1 — June 11, 2005 @ 17:05PM — Mickey

Another great review by Gypsyman , who is fast becoming one of the biggest stars of blogcritics with his scholarly and yet charming writing....Good job as usual.

#2 — June 11, 2005 @ 18:29PM — gypsyman [URL]

Blush!!
Thanks for that, I've had a hard fight with literacy due to dyslexia which has me wixing my mords occasionaly. Also make for a heavy reliance on spell check.
Sometimes it's worse then others, one morning I put all my clothes on backwords and my earing on in reverse!!!
My wife was amazed.
cheers
gypsyman

#3 — June 11, 2005 @ 21:12PM — mpho [URL]

Gypsyman, I'm looking forward to reading this and the other reviews of the series though I can't just now. It caught my eye because I'm two thirds of the way through what is billed as Ramesh Menon's "modern retelling of the great the great Indian epic." I'm enjoying it quite a bit, but I didn't know anything about the Ramayana until I picked this version up. You've gotten at least one glowing commendation here, so I'm gonna set these aside and check up out just as soon as I finish w/ Menon's version. Out of curiosity, do you know anything about it?

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