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"It was a wonderful experience interacting with you and appreciate the way you have planned and executed the whole publication process within the agreed timelines.”
Subrat SaurabhAuthor of Kuch Woh PalIn the twilight of the Tamil kingdoms, when Malik Kafur’s armies thunder south from Delhi and ancient dynasties crumble into dust, one woman dares to stand between tradition and tyranny.
Karkuzhal Pandyan possesses the most dangerous weapon in 13th-century South India: an educated mind in a woman’s body. As the Pandyan kingdom faces annihilation, she finds herself thrust into a theological duel that will determine not just her own fate, but the soul of Tamil civilisation itself.
In a world where kingdoms rise and fall like monsoon rains, can one woman’s courage preserve the essence of a civilisation that has flourished for millennia? Or will the forces of orthodoxy and empire finally silence the voices that have always insisted that wisdom matters more than birth, that truth transcends gender, and that the divine spark burns equally bright in every human heart?
A sweeping historical epic of love, loss, and the unbreakable spirit of Tamil cultural resistance.
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Karmegham
Aron Smith, writing under the pen name Karmegham, brings an interdisciplinary perspective to historical fiction through his dual career as a green technology engineer and his passion for ancient civilisations. By day, he designs sustainable solutions and environmental technologies, work that has instilled in him a deep appreciation for how innovation emerges from the intersection of traditional wisdom and modern challenges. This engineering mindset—combining analytical rigour with creative problem-solving—shapes his approach to historical research and storytelling.
The author’s choice of the pen name Karmegham—meaning “rain cloud” in Tamil—reflects both his environmental consciousness and his view that literature should nourish cultural understanding like monsoon rains sustain the earth. His engineering background in sustainable technologies informs his appreciation for how civilisations rise and fall based on their ability to adapt to changing conditions while preserving essential values.
Chronicle of Karkuzhal represents Smith’s debut into historical fiction. His unique perspective as both a technologist and historian enables him to explore how individuals and societies navigate the tension between innovation and tradition, survival and principle. When not designing renewable systems or immersed in 13th-century manuscripts, Smith pursues his palaeontological interests through fossil hunting expeditions and continues exploring the philosophical connections between ancient spiritual practices and contemporary environmental movements.
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