Musing 38- Meet the Author: Mona Verma


MUSING 38- MEET THE AUTHOR

MONA VERMA

A bit of update on my books. “Musings of a Financially Illiterate Father” is continuously trending in top 20 on Amazon and is an Amazon bestseller now. My second book, “The Millionaire Mechanic” is in advanced stages of editing and should be in your hands by next month. I am also launching my website soon, the details of which I will share next week.

How does time fly? It has been one full year since my book, “Musings of a Financially Illiterate Father”, debuted at the lit fest “Valley of Words” at Dehradun. It was my first appearance as an author at a lit fest and not surprisingly, there was a swarm of butterflies in my stomach. I was to do an hour’s interview anchored by a famed author followed by Q&A by the audience. I was nervous on two counts- firstly, my book was on a non-core subject and I was apprehensive of being bombarded with questions which I may not be able to answer. And secondly, facing intellectual and cerebral audience who may ask no-holds-barred questions without the political correctness as encountered in my profession.

To cut a long story short, the session went off exceedingly well, and no thanks to me. It happened because I was guided so beautifully by the anchor, Mona Verma, the famed author, who soothed my nerves by meeting me an hour before the interview, telling me what to expect and how to handle the Q&A. Her charm, grace and poise and the fact that she was such a celebrated author had a salutary effect on me. On this first anniversary of my debut lit fest, I thought it fit to introduce Mona and her books to you. This musing thus is not about personal finance but a fellow author and dear friend.




Mona incidentally is not only an author of 6 acclaimed books but also a poet, Academician, Soft Skills Consultant and Corporate Trainer. How she finds time and energy to do so many things together beats me and whenever I ask her, she very gracefully sidesteps the question. I though am resolute to find the answer one of these days as I find it so tough to even don a double hat- of a working professional and an author.

Mona is an award-winning author of 6 works of fiction, A Bridge to Nowhere, God is a River, The White Shadow, The Clown of Whitefields & other stories, The Other and Lost & Found in Banaras. She has edited various science journals, self -help books, biographies and is a regular feature writer for online newspapers. She is on board of various Universities as an advisory expert and is much sought as visiting faculty for Creative writing, Haiku and Limericks. She is a regular invitee to Writers' meet called for by Governor of Uttarakhand, at Rajbhawan Dehradun.

Presently, she co-owns and runs her firm DISHA, which deals with corporate, organizational and faculty/student training in Universities and Corporate houses. She is a visiting faculty at Mahindra & Mahindra, American Express, DRDO, ONGC, THDC and IITs across the country. Apart from the above, she has a keen interest in classical music, charcoal sketching, oil painting, photography and travel.

If I cover her credentials in full, I will run out of space in this blog and hence tell you a bit about her latest book, “Lost and Found in Banaras”, which is not only setting new records in sales but also winning critical acclaim. The words describing her work are of the author herself- Mona.



“Lost and Found in Banaras is entirely a work of fiction, which is based on the predicaments of the forlorn child widows in Banaras.   These women are a plaintive sight with no dearth to the plethora of the adversities they face in this obsolete culture. At the receiving end of the misgivings of an abrasive society, the dichotomy between religion and spirituality further ostracises them from the life they ought to be living. The protagonists, Brinda and Debi fight a valiant battle against these acrimonious oddities and stave off the call of the flesh that they could be pushed into; their hearts waging a war against the sensibilities of the society that are so severely sedimented into its culture.

While writing this book, I was gripped by a vexed question: What is the Law of karma, and whether there is a good reason to believe in expiating, the longing for salvation and its significance in this hedonistic age. The story is set around Banaras, the most ancient city in the world; still shrouded in the mysteries, the myths and the legends that surround it. Pilgrims and tourists throng this place to attain nirvana. The want of peace in afterlife puzzled me all the more.
Would we want to be born again? 

 And what is salvation to us?

Banaras has infinite etymologies surrounding it, the myths, the tryst for redemption and expiation from the cycle of life and death but what sense does it make to the common man of today? Do we still want it?

What fascinated me further was that where death is feared in other parts of the world, it is Banaras's currency. It is welcomed like a lucrative business. As the story wove on, I felt that Banaras fights the stereotypes in more ways than one. That is when I had Sia and Uday visit Banaras for reasons entirely different from the traditional. The former to her parental home, long left. And, Uday to relive his atavistic fears but in the name of a professional venture. But unbeknownst to them, they both had a punishing past, waiting to be unfolded. Does their sojourn help them find a cogent emotional fix? Does Kashi still render nirvana to the empathy starved and what significance does the law of karma hold for the contemporary debauched world to which Sia and Uday belong?

Lost & Found in Banaras draws its inspiration from reality, albeit it is entirely a work of fiction, yet it does not circumvent the enormity of these remissive subjects and breaks the paradox. The aphorisms from the Bhagwad Gita, further reinstate the law of karma. There is an unexpected denouement to the storyline as a new season is uncorked into the characters’ lives, which never seemed quite as possible when they had set off on their journey.

The title Lost & Found In Banaras, applies to the answers to the vexed questions that life raises again and again and a  discovery that freedom from the corroding past is what salvation is.  Sia and Uday and all those who tread this journey with them find their answers through each other, as entwined destinies come undone in the face of adversities and realisations and fate offer them a chance to expiate, not by death but by life.

And what do the child widows discover as they in their irrelevant existence just treaded their lives as mere white shadows in clear darkness? Conveniently unseen and forgotten but ubiquitously ambient, just like the white shadow of karma, something that we are never a moment without…

And it led them to find what they had lost, in Banaras.”

Hope you enjoyed reading it? I definitely did. Mona truly is a wordsmith and mesmerises the readers with her subtle play of words. Do read "Lost and Found in Banaras", it's available on Amazon. I am sharing the link.













Comments

  1. Your honesty while describing your experiences is likely to propel you to next level and we are also equally trying to emulate same for day trading tips in stock market.

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