Fire‑Born is a first‑person retelling of the Mahabharata centered entirely on Draupadi – not as a supporting figure in a heroic epic, but as the moral and emotional axis of the age itself. Born from fire, fully conscious and questioning from her first breath, this Draupadi is not a symbol or a victim, but a woman whose refusal to accept injustice becomes the catalyst for the end of an era.
The novel traces her journey from miraculous birth to chosen death, exploring her revolutionary marriage to the five Pandavas, her public violation in the royal assembly, her thirteen years of exile, and the war that follows – not as destiny, but as consequence. The central question she asks – “Where is the justice in your justice?” – is treated not as rhetoric, but as an accusation that exposes the moral failures of kings, elders, and institutions.
While deeply rooted in the Mahabharata, Fire‑Born speaks directly to contemporary readers. It engages with themes of systemic injustice, gendered violence, the cost of silence, and the difference between forgiveness and accountability. The voice is deliberately intimate, urgent, and uncompromising, placing Draupadi’s interior life – her rage, doubt, grief, and agency – at the center of the epic for the first time.
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