Immerse yourself in the raw, unfiltered verses of
Screams from the Abyss, a compelling anthology that confronts the human condition with unflinching honesty. Explore themes of death as release, life's relentless grind, philosophical quandaries between Marx and Mao, the healing power of space over time, and poignant reflections on poverty, family love, and stillbirth, and more
Poems like "Between the Sun and the Moon," "Life vs Death," and "Whisper to the God of Death" weave philosophical depth with emotional intensity, challenging readers to question existence, morality, and freedom. Perfect for lovers of contemplative poetry inspired by Eastern philosophy, regional Indian struggles, and post-structuralist thought. Discover solace in stillness and rebellion against conformity—your soul's mirror awaits.
If day be or night, if light be or not... Will your death wait?
Step into the shadowed crossroads of existence with Is It My Funeral Today?, a searing poetry anthology that strips bare the illusions of life, the embrace of death, and the philosophical fires burning within us all. Penned with unflinching rawness, these verses confront mortality not as an end, but as the ultimate liberation.
From the haunting elegy of the title "Is It My Funeral Today...", where funerals dissolve into cultural facades of black cloth or white, to "Between the Sun and the Moon", a cosmic meditation on truth's elusive glimmer amid sinners and saints. Ponder "Life vs Death", where death hums a steady rhyme beyond life's noisy decay, or "When I Die", a defiant call for honesty over hollow sympathies from neighbours and kin.
Venture deeper into "At the Gates of Hell", where a flickering spark defies the abyss, and "Quandary of the Divine", questioning God's goodness amid mankind's fractures. Feel the industrial grind in "Prioritised We Are", lost in scripted lives, or the revolutionary pulse of "Between Marx and Mao", deconstructing dialectics and peasant cries in post-structural flux.
Regional heartbeats echo through "Street Lights of Our Time", casting privilege's shadows on the poor studying under flickering lamps, and "To Life Sacrifices, Let's Bid Farewell", bidding Gorkhas to sheathe blades for a tyranny-free homeland. Grapple with "Space, Time, and the Soul", where space heals what time wounds, and "Eden in the Dimension of Time", pondering if time was Eden's curse from the apple's bite.
No theme escapes: stillbirth's unseen ache in "Stillbirth", poverty's glory in "Living in Poverty", data's cage in "The Data In You", and primal calls in "Let Out the Devil in You". Love's barricades, familial chains, mornings versus twilight—these poems rebel against conformity, urging you to shatter the coconut shell of consumption and claim your untamed essence.
In death, we lose, yet also find, the rest denied to humankind.
These pages of philosophical fire will ignite your soul.