Hindustan Times (Delhi)

OF ENCHANTMEN­T AND HIDEOUSNES­S

- The Long Arc of South Asian Art Rhythm of the Ruins

Annapurna Garimella

336pp, ~1,175, Women Unlimited

Poetry is said to be the rhythmical creation of beauty, a beauty that emanates from enchantmen­t and hideousnes­s, ecstasy and agony, castles and ruins. But the redemptive bliss from the poetic phenomenon of ruins assuming rhythm is a divine experience. Mukul Kumar’s sensibilit­y rings with the words of Oscar Wilde: “The artist is the creator of beautiful things... No great artist ever sees things as they really are. If he did, he would cease to be an artist.” The author is a civil servant, novelist and poet. A 1997 batch Indian Railway Traffic Service officer, he studied Humanities at Delhi University and Public Administra­tion at the Indian Institute of Public Administra­tion, New Delhi. His published works include three novels, As Boys Become Men, Seduction by Truth, and Aarzoarsha­n, and two poetry anthologie­s, The Irrepressi­ble Echoes and Catharsis. Rhythm of the Ruins is his third poetry collection.

Mukul Kumar

75pp, ~548; The Browser

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