Sunday 5 October 2014

Flash! Friday - Blood in the sky, blood on our fate

Link : http://flashfriday.wordpress.com/

Flash fiction is a style of writing fictional literature, that is short and concise.
Is it possible to write an imaginative, deep and meaningful story in a mere 150 words? Test yourself at Flash! Friday.
This website hosts a flash writing competition every week on Fridays. If you want details, just follow the link to the blog and read up!
This is my first ever attempt at writing flash fiction!

Volume 2 - 40

Blood in the sky, blood on our fate - (149 words)

Our feet thudded on the sandy desert floor as we ran. Shy thorns peeped from the ground beneath us. The sky was blood red and the setting sun cast an orange light on the expanse.
Time was running out.
We had to get there before nightfall, or the villagers would be slaughtered in their sleep.
We ran until we couldn’t breathe. And then we ran harder. We ran with the fury of racehorses in their last lap. This was, in a way, our last lap. Then it would be decided, for better or for worse.
The edges of my vision began to dim, but the village was just a stone’s throw away. I didn’t stop.
I bolted right into the Circle, around which the ramshackle houses were built.
Then, my feet slipped. I slid into a pool of blood. When my eyes closed, it was for the last time.

Dreams


“Hold fast to dreams,
For if dreams die
Life is a broken-winged bird,
That cannot fly.”   - Langston Hughes

A dream... It creates a dying urge within you, a roaring passion to accomplish something.
It fires up your nerves. It makes a thousand different emotions - determination, courage, hope - spring to your mind all at once.
Dreams are powerful.
Dreams can change you. They can change those around you. They can change the world.
It might seem a silly thought that your achievement could change the world. But imagine if the person who discovered the bulb thought that!
Is the bulb glowing now?
Yes. Each dream makes a difference. Humanity's hope is a sum total of the little dreams, the little hopes, that we all cherish.
A great person once said, 'When all else is lost, the future still remains.'
No matter how much you've lost, no matter how discouraged you feel, cling to your dreams. Make them come true and let them take you to places you've only dreamt of before!



Thursday 1 May 2014

How It Began

A/N - This story is dedicated to one of my friends. Happy 16th birthday, Kshama!
Description - It's a prequel-of-sorts to another full-length novel that currently resides in my head! The novel (the plot) belongs to me and four other friends. And to those of you who know the story - hope you enjoy it!
But to those of you who don't - don't worry, this works as a stand-alone (mostly!) But on the brighter side, maybe this short prequel will convince you to buy the novel, if it ever gets published!


Click to enlarge (wonderful banner by SeverusLove @tda!)
                                                   
-1-

Vivienne.
The name sounded alien to her. It was a mere day after she had abandoned everything familiar – her home, her family, her village – and already she felt the need for a greater word - a word that encompassed more meaning, one with greater depths - to define her.
Vivienne was the name of a simple girl with rosy cheeks and an innocent mind, ambling along the dusty paths of her village and exchanging greetings with the village folk she knew.
It was not the name of what she was now. Even she couldn't define herself now. Her… powers... had shattered all limits; they had expanded beyond all boundaries. She didn't know what she was anymore and her ignorance petrified her.
From the beginning, her powers had been growing. Each passing day, she was aware of a hundred new forms her energy took, a hundred new ways in which she could manipulate her surroundings. And had she been anyone different, the power would have corrupted her. But Vivienne had been a simple girl, satisfied with her lot in life; she had been ready to be the damsel in distress for any Prince Charming who might come her way.The role of a musketeer, however, had been thrust upon her too suddenly for her to accept it. So she had taken the easy way out – she had run away, not only from her home, but from society. She feared persecution too much to risk the village finding out about her powers.
Sighing, she brought back her attention to the vines she had been trying to hack. They were barring the path she had been following – a well-worn but ancient rabbit trail through the forest. She continued her efforts at hacking, ignoring the beads of perspiration lining her forehead. The cloudless sky darkened just then and the last rays of the sun vanished altogether. Cursing, Vivienne threw her blunt-edged axe to the leaf-strewn ground and sat down on the huge rock she had been using to sharpen her axe.
The sun had set, and soon even her eagle-sharp eyesight would not penetrate the darkness. Vivienne sighed and reached into her little bag of possessions that she had gathered together before running away. She took out a large flask of water and drank deeply from it. She surveyed the rest of her things – a wine cask, a hunk of cheese and a loaf of stale bread, some odds and ends, a rope, and a warm sweater. She also had some traps to catch rabbits and squirrels that she had 'borrowed' from the hunter's shack on the hill overlooking the forest.
Her meager supplies would keep her going for a few days more, at the very best. She would have to find a stream much before that, though. Her water would run out within a day, and surviving on wine was a last resort for her.
Her mind made up, she glanced at the vines. They were growing thickly, but with a proper hacker, there would have been no trouble chopping them away. Now, though, she would have to improvise with the blunt axe. Of course, there was another way…
She immediately pushed the thought away. But it kept resurfacing, and she considered trying it… It would certainly finish the job easily. And the sooner those vines were hacked, the sooner she could move forward. Maybe using her powers once wouldn't hurt. After all, she had to learn to control them. That was the reason she had run away…
She looked once more at the vines, and channeled her thoughts towards it. In her mind, she imagined a blade-sharp cleaver cutting through the brambles with practiced ease. She pulled back suddenly as she felt the familiar tug on her… mind? Her thoughts?
As suddenly as it had happened, it stopped and Vivienne sat down again, relieved. But nothing had happened to the vines. They glared at her, and she glared back.
Without knowing it consciously, she directed all her emotions at them - her anger that she had had to leave her life behind, her confusion about her powers and their capabilities, her determination to make a new life for herself and find the reason she was endowed with this strange magic; everything she had felt since leaving her home.
And the thoughts shaped into a blade in her mind, directed at the vines that blocked her path. She still wasn't ready for the tug, though, and this time it came with such force that she nearly blacked out. She jumped back, afraid that it might pull her physically too; so strong was the force. And just then, the offending vines exploded in her face.
Exploded was the right word, because they shattered to pieces and flew out in all directions. Vivienne fell to the ground on her back, and in that moment, she felt pity for the vines.
She hadn't known that she was that strong… that her emotions were that strong. The realization dawned upon her that all her magic was born from her emotions; that her feelings fueled her powers.
She tried to stand up, but to her alarm, her legs collapsed beneath her. Her mind clouded and her thoughts became fuzzy. The effort to hack the vines had taken most of her energy and now she could barely think straight. Unable to do anything else, she closed her eyes and listened to the sounds of the forest – birds tucking in their feathers to go to sleep, squirrels bounding across the trees to get to their homes…
A fleeting thought of her home passed through her mind, and then she blacked out.


 -2-

 A flurry of rain pattered against the roof of her cave.
Vivienne jerked awake and sat up on her straw bed, looking around wildly before realizing that it was just the rain.
She smiled fondly to herself as a memory came alive in her mind.
*
“Vivienne! It’s raining, child! Will you go outside?” a voice echoed through the empty hallway of her house. 
Her mother knew her all too well. All, except for her most guarded secret. She considered it trivial, yet she hadn't told a soul about it. You couldn't foresee people’s reactions about certain things, and this secret was one.
“Oh… yes, mother! I’ll be there in a minute!” she replied.
She favored her father’s portrait with a last lingering glance, and then began packing up the trunk. Whenever she felt nostalgic for their times together, before he had left her and the world behind, she took out his trunk from the attic and read his letters and journals.
Now, she hurriedly put all the contents of the trunk back, and slid it into the narrow space in the attic. Gathering up her thoughts, she walked to the bedroom of the house.
“I’m going out now, mother.”
“Be good and be back soon, child,” her mother called out from under the blankets on the bed.
Vivienne turned and went outside the house.
She stood for a moment on the steps leading up to the house, and looked at the rain pouring down in sheets. She had always loved rain. Even when she had been a child, she had loved to run out into the rain and dance and frolic around with her friends.
She went down the steps, gathering up her voluminous skirt with both her hands, and walked straight into the rain.
She twirled around and around and pretended that she was a little girl, in her fairy world of magic, where the rain would turn into mist as soon as it touched her and would cling to her, like an aura around a princess.
Vivienne never knew why this fantasy appealed to her so. Her friends mocked her for it, but she knew that this was just one of the strange wishes people had; wishes that could never come true, but were haunting.
*
A devilish smile appeared on Vivienne’s face. She might have been pretending then, but now, she could actually make it happen.
It was a long time since she had entertained any thoughts of her home and family – she constantly guarded against it - but the onslaught of rain had brought it all back to her mind.
The deed’s done, so I might as well enjoy it, she thought and stood up hesitantly.
Shaking all the apprehension out of her mind, she went out of the cave and into the pouring rain.
It was stronger and beat upon the ground with more force than she remembered. Or maybe that was because of her powers. They made her more aware to the movement of things around her. Even in this thunderous downpour, she could hear the rustling of the leaves beneath her foot as the water droplets beat upon them incessantly.
Letting her instincts take control, she twirled in the rain. All of a sudden, the memories came thudding back into the forefront of her mind.
Rain… calling out to her friends.. dancing.. laughing… carefree again…
Rain… the first time after her father died... pirouetting in the rain… drowning away her sorrow…
Rain... dancing in solitude… twirling in pensive joy... forgetting everything that meant anything…
Rain.. the drops on her skin… the feeling of bliss... happiness, after so long…
And in that moment, her undirected thoughts, her overflowing emotions, all took shape. The tug came and her senses blurred ever so slightly.
The drops falling at her feet evaporated. The mist clung to her, surrounded her, created a veil about her.
Before she knew it, a laugh of delight escaped her lips, and she found herself, for once, enjoying her powers, thanking them.
She danced in the rain. She danced in solitude but not alone – for her memories danced with her.


 -3-

 The first rays of the sun fell into the cave, brightening it up.
Vivienne’s eyes flew open as the light landed on them, but she shut them again in a vain attempt to get some more sleep. She had been up late and was tired to her bones.
She had decided to stop avoiding what she was, and try to explore her powers. The day of the rain, she had felt a freedom of sorts; a strange happiness that swelled up in her like an expanding balloon.
Who would've thought it, Vivienne the innocent girl - feeling the fire of curiosity...
But the bright light falling on her eyes had other ideas. Try as she would, she could not go to sleep again. Sighing, she plunged her face in a stone basin of cool water and stepped out of her cave.
All the animals of the forest were up and about. The sparrows were chirping away merrily, the squirrels were bounding from branch to branch. A black jay flew by her head, its wings slapping the air next to her ear, as it passed.
Vivienne walked to the stream near the cave. But it was not walking as much as hiking, for the forest had spots of undulating terrain here and there and the shortest path to the stream involved crossing one of those.
When she reached the stream, she filled her flask she had carried from home, with the gurgling stream water. It would stay cool until midday, and last her until night if she rationed it well. There had been a time when the flask would have lasted her three or even four days, but while practicing her magic, she got very exhausted and needed much more water than usual.
After washing up a little, she decided to return to her cave, when a small sound made her freeze. It had sounded like someone’s footsteps.
But of course, that’s silly, she thought. Who would be wandering here?
Yet, she retraced her steps and crouched beside a huge, prickly gorse bush that hid her from view completely. She waited for a minute, but nothing happened. She released a breath she didn't know she had been holding and stood up.
“A fair morning to you,” came a voice.
Vivienne jumped at the voice, and whirled around to face it.
“There’s no call to be startled,” said a man, who was standing some distance away. He came closer and Vivienne saw that he quite tall. He had strong arms, a square jaw and deep blue eyes full of merriness.
Then he blinked, and she saw a glint of steel in those twinkling blue eyes.
Vivienne prided herself on being a good judge of character, and though this man seemed harmless enough on first appearance – he was wearing a ragged tweed jacket which was frayed at the edges and a pair of cut-off pants - she discerned a lot of depth behind his calm demeanor.
“What are you staring at? I’m human like you, alright,” he said.
Vivienne met his gaze and spoke, “Who are you? And why are you here in the forest?”
“I have as much a right to be here as you do, fair lady. More so, because I am a hunter, one of the Forest Keepers.”
“Forest Keepers? Who are they?”
“Surely you must have heard of them, if you live within the boundaries of this forest!”
“I have not. Please enlighten me,” Vivienne replied politely.
“Well, well… does that mean you are all alone?”
“If you mean to ask if I live all by myself, you are correct.”
“That will not do at all. You must come with me and meet the rest of us.”
“And why should I trust you?” Vivienne asked, with more than a hint of doubt in her voice.
“Have I given you a reason not to?” the hunter replied, just as merrily as before.
Vivienne gazed into his eyes, trying to detect any falsehood, but he met her gaze surely. And truly.
He did not seem to be lying, and now that she thought of it, why should there not exist a soul apart from her in the huge forest? Vivienne herself had never wandered deep inside the forest and she did not know until where it extended. Maybe this was a chance to find out…
Seeming to realize that she was hesitant, the hunter said, “Well, if you do not trust me right away, that’s all right. I shall walk with you to where you live and wait until you make up your mind. But heed my advice - if you choose to live here, you will have to meet the Forest Keepers one day.”
“I’ll lead the way,” Vivienne said, her mind still dazed.
The hunter followed her wordlessly as she led the way through the forest to her cave, giving her time to observe and think.
The man seemed quite at ease in the dense foliage, avoiding tree branches and hacking away ivy with ease. He seemed a born woodsman, the way he navigated the paths of the forest and scoped out easy routes across the rocky area they had to cross.
Vivienne could not help but admire him. In the one month or so that she had lived in the forest, she had gained many useful skills for navigating through the undergrowth and brambles, but they were a far cry from the hunter’s. He seemed to do it all naturally and without a second thought.
From time to time, he would look to her and half-smile, as if he knew exactly what she was thinking. Perhaps he did.
After a while, they reached the clearing at the far end of which her cave was situated. She walked inside, but the hunter did not follow. He seemed very interested in a huge rock outside the cave, which she used for various purposes.
He bent down and brushed a bit of dirt away from its surface. He peered at something and then stood up again.
“This cave was once a dwelling of a Forest Keeper,” he said, without any preamble.
“What? How do you know?” Vivienne demanded, going closer and bending down to look at the stone herself.
She studied it closely, and saw a mark carved into the hard but smooth surface of the rock.
“What is that?” she asked the hunter.
“It is the symbol of the Keepers. A four-point star in a circle.”
“What does that mean?”
“You will know that when you join the Keepers. Of course, if you decide I’m not lying.”
Vivienne was intrigued by the mark. She ran her fingers along the groove of the design, and wondered how someone had managed to carve it on the hard rock.
She was about to voice her question, but saw that the hunter had gone inside her cave. She followed him, and saw that he was looking around with great interest at the mostly-bare dwelling.
“One of the Keepers lived here. That must have been a long, long time ago,” his voice reflected his awe.
He looked at Vivienne’s confused expression and elaborated, “A long time ago, the Keepers lived in caves such as these. They moved from place to place, protecting the forest and the people who lived in it. Each time they left a dwelling, they left a mark, like the one on the rock outside. It was always left somewhere noticeable so that if any other member of the order passed through the place, they would know that a Keeper had spent some time there and that it was safe to spend the night.”
Vivienne thought for a moment and said, “But if that’s the case, there must be marks all over the forest, is it not? Why is it a novelty to find a mark such as that one?”
“Ah, you’re a clever one. But what eventually happens to rocks and trees over centuries?”
“They crumble. Or die, in the case of trees. I see…” Vivienne replied.
“Precisely! Most marks were made so long ago that they have faded by now. But some were carved on lasting structures - again, like the one on the rock outside – and even after centuries, they remain.”
“Interesting,” Vivienne replied, her voice toned with an enthusiasm that she rarely displayed. Her cold reserve faded away in that moment and she smiled broadly.
The hunter smiled back at her, his eyes twinkling. She had been deprived of human company for ever so long, and now that she had it, she wasn't sure she could let it go. And maybe these Forest Keepers would have some answers for her…
“One last question: What is your name?” she asked him.
“Everyone just calls me ‘Hunter’,” he replied.
“Well, Hunter, lead the way to the Keepers.”
He grinned once again, and the solitude in her mind vanished as if it had never been there.


 -4-

 “I still think we should go on,” Vivienne told Hunter, a determined expression on her face.
“And I still maintain that we shouldn't. Darkness has descended. It is not a good idea to continue climbing in the dark. One wrong step and you’ll fall to your death,” Hunter replied, equally obstinate.
Vivienne sighed and gazed out at the thick forest beneath her. Hunter was right, but she didn't want to admit it. Now that she was so close to her destination - so tantalizingly close! - she didn't want to stop anywhere.
Almost a month ago, the Keepers had told her of a shrine, located at the peak of a rugged mountain in the forest. They kept their deepest secrets there and guarded them fiercely. And then it had struck Vivienne that she might find something there which would explain it all. She had made up her mind right that moment, to visit the shrine.
But what the Keepers hadn't told her was that the mountain was extremely dangerous to climb. And that there were an infinite number of ways one could die while undertaking this journey. Of course, this protected the Keepers’ secrets much better than any guard ever could have. Only one path existed that led a person right to the top of the mountain, and though it was fraught with dangers of its own, it provided a way to get to the shrine. And this path was only known to a few. Hunter was one of them.
“You can wait one more night, you know. Tomorrow, you will find out all that you ever wanted to know.”
“That is,” Vivienne reminded him, “if my answers lie there.”
“Oh, they will. There is an answer to every conundrum there.”
“You seem very sure.”
Hunter did not reply. He was warm and friendly most of the times but on this journey, Vivienne had noticed that at times, he seemed to sink into himself. He would not respond to any questions for a while, he would just stare into space. She wondered if he had memories of the shrine that he wanted to forget. But then, why did he volunteer to come with her?
Shaking herself out of her reverie, she gathered up the soft straw that she had brought with her, and flattened it out on the ground. Then she lay on her back, and watched the stars overhead.
In a while, Hunter lay down too.
He was snoring as soon as his head hit the straw. Vivienne glanced over at him enviously.
Usually, sleep evaded her like a cunning thief. And she was the bumbling law-keeper, tripping over herself and trying in vain to capture the wily robber.
She returned her gaze to the stars, and counted all the constellations she could identify. The knowledge of these patterns had been passed down in her family from generation to generation and like all the other things she had left behind, she treasured it.
Slowly, her mind started drifting to other things. Finally, it came to rest at the one thing she couldn't bear to think about. Her powers. She had not used them for a long while now. She had thought that the lesser she used them, the lesser they would grow. Unfortunately, she could still sense them expanding. They never stopped, never paused. Fraction by fraction, they continued widening. And what confused her most was that she didn't know how she could tell that her powers were growing. She just knew it, and there was no explanation how.
And though she had stopped using them, they felt like a deep part of her. Something that she would miss as much as an amputated arm if it left.
Strange how I think of it as a living, breathing thing that will jump up one day and decide it's going to leave, huh?
Her desire to learn more about them could not be quelled. Why had she been bestowed with this magic? How was she supposed to use it? Why was it expanding?
And all these answers, the Keepers had said, would be found in the shrine.
The impatience she had been dealing with rose up in her again. She couldn't wait to get to there. The darkness impeded her path. If only it would go away… Of course! That was it! Why hadn't she thought of it before?
Because it’s a terrible idea? A small part of her brain told her, but she ignored it.
There was a way to get up to the shrine and she would take it. And anyway, she would prefer it if Hunter was not there when she found her answers. As much as she trusted the Keepers, she didn't think it was their place to receive such forbidden knowledge.
She stood up slowly, and concentrated on her eagerness to get to the shrine, her determination to unravel the secrets that had been kept for so long. There was a tug on her mind, and all of a sudden, a ball of bright light appeared on her palm. She didn't know whether she had created light, or was merely channeling it from elsewhere.
And for the first time, she didn't care.

*
She was nearing the peak. If she craned her neck, she could just see the tip of the shrine’s roof.
Slowly and laboriously, she continued climbing and after a while, she was standing on the flat land at the peak of the mountain.
Vivienne allowed herself a minute of basking in the moonshine, and regaining her breath. Then, she walked to the entrance of the shrine.
It looked very much like Hunter had described it, serene and grand. Two massive turrets rose out of the shrine and brushed the dark, night sky. There seemed to be more than a hundred slit-like windows on its top level. From the outside, it looked very much like a fortress. And she supposed that in a way, it was a fortress, designed to keep the intruders out and the secrets in.
It exuded an aura of mystery even from afar, and now that she was close to it, she could almost taste obscurity in the air.
She hesitated for a second at the door, but then pushed away all her doubts and gathering up her nerves, knocked on it. Hunter had told her that the way to gain entrance into the shrine was to knock on it thrice. It was that simple. 
She was jerked out of her thoughts, as the door began to swing open with a grating sound. She marvelled for a second at the mechanics of the door. It must have been ages since anyone had been here, yet it swung open as easily as a door with all its hinges oiled.
She stepped inside the shrine, and squinted. A bright yellow light cascaded through the room, and straight into her eyes. In a moment, her eyes adjusted to the brightness and she stepped inside cautiously.
She was in a huge room with a very high ceiling, which shone gold everywhere she looked. She deduced that this was the treasury. As she went further in, it was obvious that she had been right. Gold coins fell in small mounds from chests, jewelry lay in heaps everywhere, and daggers encrusted with gems were hung on the walls.
She was confused as to why all the treasure lay in the entrance hall. Surely, they should have been hidden away in some vault which no one had access to…
And then the answer hit her – maybe all these precious things were the least valued treasures here. Of course. The very first thing she had found out about the Keepers was that they valued knowledge the most. The knowledge lying within the fortress was much more important and precious to the Keepers than the gold and riches.
She ignored her urge to run her hands through the sacks of gold coins and examine the ancient swords that lay on the floor. Keeping her eyes ahead of her, she crossed over to the other side of the hall and found herself facing three doorways. She picked the middle path and walked down a narrow, dusty corridor. The walls on either side were lined with mounted heads of birds, deer, stags and some strange looking animals she could not identify.
There was so much to see here that Vivienne was sure she would never find the answer she was seeking. She could keep roaming the corridors forever and get lost. Eventually, she would starve to death, and no one would be able to find her body…
She shook her head violently in an attempt to stop thinking. Then, taking a deep breath, she walked through the corridor and into the next.
*
It had been hours since she had entered the shrine, and exactly like she had predicted, she was hopelessly lost. And exhausted.
Missing the previous night’s sleep had a worse effect on her stamina than she had thought. She could tell it was morning because at one point, she had come to an open window – one of the slit-like ones she had noticed from outside – and she had seen the red sky and the sliver of brightness that meant the sun was rising.
She had tried to figure out which part of the castle she was in, but as soon as she turned a few corners, she was lost again.
Trying to fight her weariness and the increased feeling of despair, she stumbled forward into a room. It was small and dusty, but at one end, she saw that there was a hammock hanging from the ceiling. She wondered why the hammock would be placed there, for there would certainly be no sunlight falling upon it even in the day.
But whatever the reason, she was happy it had been placed there. It meant that she could catch up on her rest. One part of her mind – the sensible one – cautioned her about approaching the hammock, but unable to resist its pull she found herself climbing in to it and lying down on her back.
She thought of pleasant things – bright sunlit days in her village, playing around with her friends, talking to her mother until late in the night – and drifted off to sleep.
*
Vivienne woke up with a jerk from a particularly nasty dream. She had been standing on the top of a cliff, trying to keep her balance, but in the end, her foot had slipped and she had been on the way to becoming mince-pie when she woke up.
For a moment, she was confused to see the gloomy, dusty room around her but then memory thudded back into her head at a painful speed. She looked around herself for a moment, then jumped off the hammock and ran out of the room.
The sleepiness vanished from her mind altogether and she was finally able to think clearly. The panic hit her in waves, gently at first and then like a tsunami.
Her emotions burst forward into her mind – her guilt at having fallen asleep, her anxiety to find her way out of the shrine and at the same time, her desperation to find the answers she sought – in a sudden flurry and she found the edges of her vision fading. And again, the all-too familiar tugging...
Then her knees fell beneath her and she found herself on the floor. When she opened her eyes, she gasped. She was in another room. And it seemed like an exact replica of the entrance hall, except it shone bronze.
Her mind grappled blindly with reality and slowly, she guessed that she had used magic to transport herself to where she wanted to go. The room that held her answers. And by the look of it, many more that she didn't know the questions for. Yes, she had landed in a library of solutions.And it was time - at last! - to look for hers.


 -5-

 Vivienne gasped to regain her breath. Her knees gave way beneath her and she thankfully sank to the floor. Her eyes stared at the ceiling of her cave, tracing the cracks on it. She found herself admiring the beautiful pattern they created on the hard stone. Beautiful, yet unsymmetrical. She dwelt upon that phrase for a moment and decided that all beautiful things must be so.
All beautiful things must be imperfect. The imperfection sets them aside, gives them that beauty. But beauty, like all things, will fade. One day.
And one day, she would fade too.
And maybe that day would come very soon. She willed her mind to think about something else, anything else. But her thoughts lurched towards the shrine… the parchment…
Fear.
Fear cloaked her. It was like a veil. She could see past it, but it distorted her vision of the world. It twisted everything she saw, and made her feel even more afraid. Like an endlessly accelerating loop.
No, it can’t be! It’s impossible… She found herself thinking.
But it was possible. She had seen it with her own eyes. For a minute, it hadn't gotten through to her and she had stared blankly at the ancient parchment, uncomprehending. And then, like the piercing of an arrow, the meaning behind those innocent words had shot into her mind.
And she had refused to believe it.
Yet, the parchment had been right about everything else – her powers, the way it felt to use them, the ever-expanding feeling that went with it - all of those! Surely, everything else it said must be right too.
Sighing, she had brought herself to the conclusion that she didn't want to believe it, but it was true. It had to be.
A sudden feeling of panic and apprehension had bubbled within her chest, and she had transported herself right outside that shrine and to the foothills of the mountain. And then she had run. She had run blindly, between the trees, over the streams, across the clearings.
She had run until her lungs were bursting, and her vision was beginning to blur from all sides. It was only then that she had slowed down. Even then, she had reached her cave faster than she could have though humanly possible.
Of course, I’m hardly any ordinary human, she thought.
And then the fears were back. How could she live without her powers? They were a part of her, as surely as her eyes and ears were.
But what other choice did she have? It was the only way she could live…
With another huge sigh, she realised that she had known. She had known that it would come to this all along. Never for a moment had she imagined that she could keep her powers forever and live in the forest forever.
She had rather thought that it had all been a mistake – a mistake that could be erased someday.
But when the time had come, finally, she found she wasn't ready. She wasn't ready to give up this life of freedom. She wasn't ready to give up her powers.
But she had to do it. Or face the terrible consequences.
Her thoughts were getting blurry now. She couldn't discern one thing from another. Her eyes closed, and before she lost consciousness, a thought ran through her mind, followed by calm acceptance:
I must give up my power. I must give it up to those who deserve it better. I must divide it between some others, or I will be consumed in the searing white light of my magic…
















Saturday 12 April 2014

The Boy in the Striped Pajamas

Most people in today's world know of the atrocities committed during World War II by Adolf Hitler and his crew of nasty Nazis. Hitler ordered genocide on the Jews in Europe, and thousands of people were killed. It was not only the victim families which were affected, but some Germans who suffered as well.
The Boy in the Striped Pajamas by John Boyne talks about a German family, in which the father is a Nazi General. Hitler - the Führer - is happy with the father's work, and decides to send him to the Auschwitz concentration camp to oversee the project there.
And so, the general's family is forced to move out of their comfortable house in Berlin to a dusty, old, solitary house near the concentration camp, which was separated by a long, huge fence. Nine-year-old Bruno is especially affected by the move, having to leave his three best friends and come to a place where there was no one his age except for his irritating elder sister.
But one day, Bruno notices some people - boys, fathers, uncles, grandfathers - across the fence, all of whom were wearing the same clothes, that is, striped pajamas. Bruno is surprised to see boys of his age there...how come they never came over to his side of the fence to play with him?
Bruno asks his sister a few questions, who immediately says that they were Jews, who were bad, and that Germans didn't like them. Bruno wonders why, for they seemed to be just like others. His sister, however, was horrified when he voiced his opinion, and he decides to shut up and keep his ideas to himself.
Bruno goes exploring, and one day finds a small gap in the fence. Later when he comes back, he sees a boy sitting across the fence near the gap. The two begin to talk, and find that they were born on the same day and are both nine years old. Over time, they bond and Bruno is finally happy to be living here. The book ends when Bruno decides to go under the fence and explore the boy's world dressed up in striped pajamas, and he sees the world there. He is shocked to see them living in such dire, extreme, dirty conditions. To avoid spoiling the ending, all I will say is that at the end of the book you are left with such...regret, such deep thoughts.
The book shows you a child's point of view of the second world war, and all that happened in Nazi Germany. There is never any actual mention of killing, gas chambers, Nazis, Jews, death, war...nothing of that sort at all. The nine-year-old little boy is oblivious of all that is happening around him. Really, all he cares is that they moved to a weird old house and left his school and friends behind, then he had no one to play with, and then suddenly he did.
The book makes you think about how the world was at that time for children, and especially Nazi family children, since Bruno's father is a Nazi General. The book makes you realize that though we all know about the war and all the horrible things that happened, no one really knows how it was to live in such times as a child; a child who just wanted his life to be normal and have fun with his friends...a child who, being completely innocent and pure, could not understand why Jews were classified as 'bad'.
In simpler words, the book gives you a different outlook on the same old thing which most of us have read about and studied about in school. It shows you a different view, and it's startling how accurately the author, John Boyne, has depicted the child's feelings. It's a must read for all those who enjoy a little historical book every now and then...especially since you don't have to mug it up for an exam. :)

Friday 21 March 2014

The Real Anne Frank

It's the little details that are vital. Little things make big things happen - John Wooden.

I think everyone who’s reading this has heard of Annelies Marie Frank - probably the most famous Holocaust victim of all times.
And for those of you who have not - she was a young girl who lost her life, simply because she was a Jew, as many others in Hitler’s regime did.
What was it that made Anne Frank’s name so commonly known throughout the world? What was it that makes her name pop into our minds immediately upon hearing the term ‘Nazism’ or ‘Holocaust’?
It was her simplicity.
If you read her diary (The Diary of a Young Girl - Anne Frank) you know at once, that Anne was completely normal. She was no different from you and me.
Her thoughts were not those of a philosopher - just of a child who was put in a very confusing and terrible situation. Yet she was not a child. She was more mature and conscious of the world than any child of her age would have been (having to hide from society for years does that to a person, you know!)
She went about her daily activities with cheerfulness. Even though she was in turmoil inside, her exterior remained clam and composed. Her vibrance and energy displayed that she believed in a happier life for herself. She believed that she would be alive and free one day. She wanted to fly out into the world, her wings unfurled and the winds carrying her to a greater destiny.
Her positiveness and hopeful outlook to the world is radiated through her thoughts. She believed, even at the time of her death, that the world was a good place to live in and that men were humane (pun intended!)
And now tell me - What are the odds? What are the odds that this girl’s diary would be found years after her death? That her name would be put down in history forever?
Despite being one of millions of people killed in the Holocaust, she stands representative for all the victims of the Nazi cult. She wasn’t a great freedom fighter (I’m using that term loosely here). No, she wasn’t. She wasn’t a Jew leader who saved hundreds of lives. No, she wasn’t.
She was merely a little girl who, through her personal diaries, taught the world something important. She taught us that when all else is destroyed, the future still remains.
And that - that tiny iota of hope she had in humanity despite being at it’s cruel end - taught the world a vital lesson.
Little things make big things happen. Little thoughts lead to bigger thoughts. Little ideas can change the world. Little actions can set off a chain of life-changing events. And why, little things like these could make or break an empire!

Tuesday 11 March 2014

Wonder at the Wonders!



“I felt my lungs inflate with the onrush of scenery—air, mountains, trees, people. I thought, "This is what it is to be happy.” - The Bell Jar, Sylvia Plath.


We live in a beautiful world.

So many things in this world are uncertain - who created it, how it was formed, how life evolved...

But one thing we know for sure - this is a beautiful world!

There are flowers and fragrances, there are buds and blossoms. There are waterfalls and valleys, there are the skies and the seas. There are stunning rainbows and vibrant rain-forests. There are sheer cliffs and rugged mountains. There are vast deserts and giant icebergs. There are ethereal sunsets and and twinkling stars. There are green meadows and winding rivers. There are fluffy clouds and tumultuous thunderstorms. There are ancient fossils buried deep, and soaring birds high in the sky. There are beautiful peacocks and mighty lions. There are terrible predators and gentle prey. There are millions of unique and different life forms on this planet.

And then there's us, who live in blissful ignorance of Earth's beauty.

We have one lifetime on this planet. Isn't it a shame to waste that one lifetime blind to everything around us? Isn't it a shame to be so caught up in the shallow ways of the world, that you close your eyes to its wonders?

So open your eyes. Go and live. Take your time to caress a blooming bud. Take your time to gaze upon the azure forget-me-nots along a road. Take your time to watch a lone ant threading its path through the labyrinthine paths of the ground. Take your time to sit on a hammock in the breeze and just relax. Take your time to watch the sun rising above the horizon, ever so slowly. Take your time to ponder over the depth of the oceans and the vastness of the skies. Take your time to appreciate the spectacles around you.

Wonder, marvel and live in captivated joy, every moment of your life!

Who knows, in your next life you might be a mayfly with a lifespan of just a day! So enjoy your life while you can!

Monday 24 February 2014

Keep it simple!

Keep it simple. - Frank Zhang to Annabeth Chase, The Mark of Athena, The Heroes of Olympus.

Life throws at you many challenges. They're all to test you. All the problems you have, all the situations you have to face, have a simple solution.
The web of problems in your life is basically like a circuit diagram on your test paper. It looks very complicated. There are many crisscrossing paths and an infinite number of routes the current could take. Except there aren't.
Let me tell you what happens as soon as you see the diagram - First thing, you panic. How in the world are you going to work out the resistance of this circuit? It looks virtually impossible. Second, you finish the rest of the paper and resign yourself you spend hours on this last problem left to solve. You look closer, you turn the paper around in all possible directions and then something hits you. No, you think. It can't be possible. There must be a mistake somewhere. But it is true. The answer is extremely easy. And then it hits you again. That was the whole purpose of the question, to get you confused. You have realized that only one path qualifies to take the current from beginning to end. The rest are all redundant. You heave a sigh of relief, which turns into a groan as you realize the time allotted for solving the paper is almost up. Hurriedly, you solve the sum and submit your paper.
Most of the challenges we face in life are also similar to this. We, being humans, create complexities that don't exist. We imagine dilemmas which are totally unreal. We add new dimensions to every problem. We examine it from every angle. All the while, the solution lies before us, crystal clear. The only thing is, we overestimate the capability any situation has of confusing us.
So don't complicate things much. Remember that most of the problems you anticipate won't actually happen. Remember that things are actually much easier to solve than you think they are.Whether it is freeing yourself from a pair of Chinese handcuffs (inside joke) or finding a way to achieve your dreams, you'll eventually find a way.
Dream big and think big, but remember - Keep it simple!


Wednesday 5 February 2014

Bored? Pick up a book!

Are you having one of those periods of extreme boredom? Are you reading this just because you're bored and have nothing else to do?
Well, then, that's awesome! 'Coz I'm going to tell you something about how to shush your boredom chip by reading books. 

BOOKS: 
In the first place, what is a  book? Ever looked it up on Wikipedia? 

'A book is a set of written, printed, illustrated or blank sheets, made of ink, paper, parchment or other materials, usually fastened together to hinge at one side.'

Alphabetic writing first emerged in Egypt, where papyrus was used as a substitute for paper - in fact, that's where the word 'paper' comes from.
Books were at first merely a collection of sheets, and over the years, have emerged to the form they are presently manufactured in.

All right, now to the main part. How do you select a book? Here are a few tips that I myself have used quite a few times.

  • Choose according to your likes. If you're a fiction - lover, then choose fiction - related books, if you're a comics - lover then you should try out magazines and newspapers along with illustrated comics. For non - fiction lovers, there's always a huge range of biographies, autobiographies, some interesting accounts of people's lives and so on.
  • Ask a friend. The best way to find out about new books is to ask your friends what they suggest reading. Most of the times, word of mouth is reliable. I've read a thousand books my friends told me to read, and a thousand others my cousins told me to read. And I loved almost all of them.
  • Browse the web. Sometimes, you can find a book other people your age have been reading around the world. Lists of the top (number) famous books, and such other articles help too.
  • Go author-wise. If you read a book you loved, look up the author's other books and try them. They're most likely going to interest you almost as much as the first. And sometimes, you like them even better than the first series/novel you read. The Host, for example, got me hooked so easily, it was amazing. Of course, I had to struggle through every part of the Twilight Saga, and now I think it was definitely not worth the effort.
  • Pick up randomly. If you're browsing through a library's collections and have no idea whatsoever about which book you want to read, then it's your best bet to pick up random books that catch your eye. There's usually always a summary on the back cover and if it interests you, you could try it.

Maybe my tips helped you, or maybe not. But I've certainly entertained you for... two minutes, I think. I know there are a lot of people who might have read this in thirty seconds and to them I can only say - I understand why you're having a problem finding books. You've read them all!
Just kidding! No one's read all the books there are to read. Believe me, there's a whole host of novels that you've never heard of and that would greatly interest you, out there. You just have to find them.
Happy book hunting!

SOURCES - Wikipedia, and my experiences!



Wednesday 29 January 2014

What happened on August 18...

Disclaimer : I don't own any of the characters in this world. Rick Riordan does! Only the plot is mine…



WHAT HAPPENED ON AUGUST 18

                                       drop-jaw gorgeous banner by Azulive @ tda


 PART - I

It was the eighteenth of August. A fair morning dawned, the sun shone bright. Flowers blossomed, the mist cleared and the sky was blue with fluffy clouds. Of course, apart from being a really nice day, it was also Percy Jackson's birthday. His first birthday after the second giant war. "Oh, big affair", you would think, but for the demigods of Camp Half-blood, it was indeed a big day. It was the last day Percy and Annabeth were staying at camp. Then they would be off to New Rome, to attend college and do all the other 'normal' things demigods were usually denied.
Of course, a see-off party was in order, and what better way to do it than combining it with a birthday party?
Travis and Connor Stoll took charge of the fun department, of course. Food could be arranged in a snap. You had to say it, and you would have it! The decorations were left to the nymphs and satyrs. Chiron hinted that the gods themselves were going to present him with a gift for saving Olympus along with the Heroes of Olympus. The campers were awed upon hearing this, but they promised to keep quiet about it all and let it be a surprise to Percy.
Percy knew, obviously, that something was going on and he wasn't being told, but he took it in a good spirit and refused to be curious. He would wait until the D-day patiently.
And thus the D-day dawned bright and happy, with preparations going on full-swing and every person looking forward to the evening...

PERCY
Something was definitely not normal at camp. Everyone rushing about, giving me suspicious looks and then rushing away. My mother's insistence that I spend the whole of today with her. She might have spared a thought for me, after all. I would be seeing her every now and then because she was going to shift to San Francisco. But it would be almost impossible for me to visit camp after shifting to New Rome. I deserved to say a proper goodbye to my safe haven.
Anyway, I was not about to spend my birthday being miserable. I was going to eat blue cake, blue muffins, blue biscuits... and well, you get it. I would have a blast with Mom and Paul and enjoy my birthday totally!
With these happy thoughts, I finished my morning training and then packed up some stuff to take home.
A whistle to Blackjack and he was there, my mighty Pegasus, flapping his wings eagerly and bowling me over with all the latest gossip from Pegasi-town. I'd already said goodbye to Annabeth and spent about five minutes wondering why she categorically refused to come home for my birthday with me. Maybe Mom had told her we wanted a family day and being Annabeth, she had obliged readily.
Sighing, I took off on Blackjack and made my way home. I was greeted by my overjoyed mother and a grinning Paul. After the bone-crushing hugs session and a fist bump with Paul, we started our feast. Mom's food was all blue, of course, and I had the meal of my life!
We were chatting, catching up with each other's news when the window rattled open and Jason flew in. Yes, he actually flew into my house, shouted "Percy's needed at Camp Halfblood NOW!" and pulled me out of the window with him. Paul was staring open-mouthedly and Mom was just standing there, and waving goodbye. After getting over my shock, the fear began to set in. "Can't we take the subway, Jason?", I asked him. "No, we can't. We need to get back, and fast!"
Now the fear turned into dread. "Is Annabeth okay? Grover? And everybody else?" "Yes, everyone's absolutely fine, Percy. Now shut up and be a good passenger, will you?" Jason snapped.
Figuring something really bad would happen if I spoke again, I decided to obey my pilot's orders. We were back at Camp in no time at all (which was like five long days for me) and he dumped me unceremoniously on the ground. I got up and immediately punched him on the nose. "What happened, and why exactly did I have to endure that dreadful journey?" Jason simply pouted and replied,"You'll see soon enough. Come on!"
Then he dragged me off to the Big House and locked me in the Rec Room. I pounded my fists and he gave a shout, "Mischief, thou art afoot!" "Don't quote Shakespeare!" I shouted to the empty dark space around me.
"Okay, calm down!" I told myself. First, I had to find the light switch. That done, I sighed in relief as the whole room lit up in a moment. I almost expected a shout of "HAPPY BIRTHDAY, PERCY!" but knowing my friends, I suppose that was too much to hope for. The room was well and truly empty and I was well and truly locked in…


PART - II

Olympus was in chaos. Artemis said the boy deserved a gift. Apollo and Hermes nodded. Athena said Zeus must not break his word. He had already told Chiron that the boy would be rewarded on his birthday, and now it must be done. Ares glared at the goddesses vehemently, but kept quiet. He was not in Zeus' favour at the moment. Poseidon did not intefere and looked on gravely as the argument raged around him. Hestia was, as usual, by the hearth and Dionysus was trying to summon up a bottle of wine. Aphrodite was playing with her hair, Hera was staring into space and Demeter was trying not to look bored. Hephaestus was the only one listening attentively, yet silently.
This was a very common scene in the Olympus throne room, but this time, the argument was very silly. Zeus had decided that Percy Jackson must be rewarded on his birthday for saving Olypmus along with his friends. Any desire of his would be fulfilled. But at the last minute, the plan had changed. Ares, still fuming about the attention the boy got, had suggested 'casually' that the boy might choose immortality and one day, usurp Zeus' throne. He had laughed and called it a joke, but now Zeus was paranoid.
Just when things were about to get out of hand, Hephaestus spoke, "Father, I do not think Jackson will choose immortality. He had already turned it down once. In any case, if that is all the problem is about, then you can grant him anything he desires, but immortality."
Zeus was pleased with this simple suggestion and decreed that Percy would receive his due, after all. Poseidon smiled to himself, wondering at how the Olympians could sometimes be more foolish than a pack of donkeys.
Of course Percy wouldn't choose immortality without Annabeth, and maybe not even if it was offered to both of them...

PERCY
So I was shoved into a dark room with only Chiron's horrible records and a much-weathered (sat on at points of time) ping-pong table for company.
At the very least, they could have given me some warning or a chance to defend myself. I would certainly have killed Jason with no remorse, the ride he subjected me to was horrifying.
I set about trying to break the door down, but it didn't budge an inch. I started thinking. Maybe they had Frank in grizzly form holding the door in place. Yes, maybe I could convince him to back off. He's seen what I can do when I get angry. I called out to Frank, "Move back, Grizzly! I'm furious now..", before hearing a chuckle from outside. I stopped dead in my tracks. I had just been fooling around, but maybe there was someone guarding me. All I had to do was convince them.
But my hopes were dashed to Hades when an all-too-familiar voice spoke sarcastically, "No way, Jackson! Tell me you did not think Frank in grizzly-bear form was guarding you.
"Annabeth, is it you? Let me out!" "Not that easy, Seaweed Brain. You're gonna have to try a lot harder than this!"
"It's my birthday, Annabeth. Please be a darling and let me out!"
Annabeth whistled casually. So she couldn't be emotionally blackmailed. But bribing was definitely worth a try.
"Alright then, I'll buy you a library, Wise Girl!"
Wise Girl pretended to consider for a moment, before replying, "Tempting, but still not enough."
"Hmmm... what about our very own house in New Rome, with a built-in three-floor library, and a command room with all super-speed Internet and super-advanced gadgets?"
Annabeth gasped at that. I knew she would take her time on this one, so I wandered to the other end of the room, wracking my brain for another exit method.
Just as Annabeth called out, "I'm not letting you out, so don't get your hopes up!" time seemed to slow down in the room. The clock was ticking slower, I was walking like a turtle and then everything stopped altogether. A portal dazzled to life on the ping-pong table and out stepped Hecate, the goddess of magic. "Come, Perseus" she said and waited. If you would unfreeze me, I thought, unable to move my lips. She seemed to realise it, though, because she snapped and suddenly, I was sucked into the portal. I landed in an undignified heap again, but this time I looked up to see that I was in the Olympus throne room…


 The campers were longing for the party to begin. Leo Valdez was to unveil his special gift to Percy, the Stoll brothers were organising some fun games and of course, there would be unlimited, delicious food!
So when they heard the news of Percy's disappearance (may I add, again!) there were a lot of worried faces, a lot of disappointed faces and a lot of stunned faces all around Camp. The juicy bit of information spread like wildfire and soon, everyone was talking about it. 
Chiron had to interrupt to prevent Annabeth from breaking down in front of everyone. And when the campers heard of Percy's whereabouts from Chiron, there was even more gossip to spread. What would Percy choose? Immortality? Peace? What, what, what, what? That was the red question, that no one (save Annabeth, perhaps) could answer with certainty.

PERCY
I rose from my awkward position on the floor of Olympus' throne room as gracefully as I could, only to face numerous immortals staring at me like I was a prize exhibit.
I straightened up and bowed to Poseidon. I greeted Zeus next, with a muttered "A great honour, mighty King of Gods". I had learnt long ago that it stands in your best interests to behave with the gods as appropriate. My feud with Ares was still smoldering in the cauldrons of our hatred for each other... but that is another long story.
"I suppose you are wondering why you were summoned here, Perseus Jackson!" Zeus told me gravely. I nodded. 
"We Olympians have decided to reward you for saving Olympus" he continued. Again, I was tempted to add.
"I, Zeus, King of Gods, proclaim that this boy, Perseus, shall have anything he desires, but immortality!"
I sighed and looked directly at Zeus, "Yes, sir! I would not dream of asking you for that gift, anytime."
"That is as it should be. Decide quickly now, puny mortal!" Zeus thundered.
Apollo jumped up immediately and told me, "Ask for a car-chariot like mine, Percy. Then we both can go for joyrides together!"
"No, ask for a long, happy life with Annabeth!" Aphrodite exclaimed. Athena looked up at that and glowered at me.
"I think we should let the boy decide. It is his birthday, after all!" Artemis said. At this, all the gods fell quiet and looked towards me, curious to listen to my choice.
To be frank, I didn't know what I wanted exactly. I opened my mouth to say so, but shut it again. Something was taking shape in the back of my mind.
"Well, if I could, I would ask for all you gods to never have children with mortals again..."
At that, all the gods looked at me so strangely that I hastily said, "But of course, that is not possible. Neither can I ask you to leave my life alone and never put me or Annabeth into danger again."
It was fate that kept putting demigods in danger, that much I had learnt from my experiences. Olympian gods, though immortal, had hardly any measure of control over their situations. I don't know if Capital-G God exists or not, but if he does, he is the only one who can decide my fate.
"I wish to ask this of you, then. I want a life for demigods like me, outside of fighting monsters. A life like there is in New Rome. Annabeth and me can go there if we so wish, but that is only because we are heroes now - heroes who saved Olympus. But what of those children who have never left camp, and probably never will until there is another war? What of those demigods who do not wish to spend their entire lives training for something that might never happen? What of those who want a normal life, at least, as normal a life as a demigod's can be?
All of them cannot go to New Rome. Our Camps are not as friendly as to allow that. So I ant you to create a connection between Camp Half-blood and Camp Jupiter. I want you join them magically, or otherwise, which will make them one large Camp. Or create a free portal between both Camps.
I want Greeks and Romans to train together, to learn each others' languages, to live together if they so wish. I want New Rome as a safe haven for all demigods, regardless of their origin. Only then will your different forms be reconciled with each other forever."
A stunned silence greeted me. I could see different reactions and emotions running on the faces of the Olympians.
I could also see that I had dropped a bombshell, making such a wish. Maybe I shouldn't have. But I was happy I did. You see, on the way back from Greece, the Seven Heroes of Olympus had talked quite a bit about the life of a demigod and we had concluded that something like my wish would be the best solution to our problems. We would actually get a choice whether we wanted to fight monsters or not. It wouldn't be forced on us. But at the time, none of us had ever thought tit would be possible. Now I had seen a way, and though it seemed crazy, I had taken the chance. I knew Reyna wanted this too, she had told me personally. I also knew that even if the campers rejected the idea at first, they would soon see sense and agree to the arrangement.
The Olympians must have been having a silent discussion, because a grave voice snapped me back to reality…


“You ask for a lot, my boy! Couldn’t you be satisfied with something else?”Artemis asked, shooting a worried look at Zeus.
“I’m sorry, Goddess. This is what I want, and nothing else will please me - not wealth and not health.” Percy replied.
Zeus looked thoughtful, and after a minute he spoke, “You will have it, Perseus. I am pleased with your selflessness. But of course, convincing the others will be up to you and I am sure the consequences of the action will be your responsibility. Think hard, nephew!”
“My decision has been taken, oh Zeus! I am sure about this.” Percy said without any hesitation.
Zeus’ expression grew lighter and he snapped his fingers once. “It will be done on the next full-moon day. Until then, prepare yourselves.”
This scene enfolded in the Gods’ throne room after Perseus Jackson asked for his wish on the 18th day of August.

PERCY
I was terribly scared I had crossed the limit. I was sure the Gods were discussing just how to zap me to Hades, but then Zeus’ speech came and my joy knew no bounds. We were getting what we wanted, at last. My insides did a little dance as Hecate transported me back to the locked room.
Crap! The locked room! Annabeth! It all came flooding back to me as I realised how much my disappearance would have scared her, and the camp.
I shouted out, and running footsteps were heard. The door opened and Annabeth flung herself at me. I found myself caressing her hair, and telling her it was alright. I promised I would never scare her like that again and she stepped back. She surveyed me for a moment and then burst out, “That’s it, right? You’re immortal, aren’t you?”
I was so bewildered, I laughed. “No way, Annabeth. Immortality, for me? Never! Zeus would never allow it.”
Annabeth laughed with me then, “I knew you wouldn’t choose it and leave me behind. But… one can never be too sure, right? So what did you ask for?”
I told her, and for a moment she looked at me with her mouth hanging open. Then, she screamed.
Let me just say that it was some time before we both calmed down enough to walk out of the Big House. By mutual understanding, we had decided to keep the matter to ourselves until we were alone with the rest of our best friends.
We had the best party ever… and I was so touched. Leo’s gift was amazing - an entire cabin for sword-training and archery practice (need I say, I suck at it). It had state-of-the-art facilities and I was left gaping, and mouthing, “Wow!”
The games were pretty cool, too! Me and Annabeth had the most fun time since Gaia’s defeat, ever!
But that night, as I fell into the dreamy lull that precedes sleep, I knew what the best parts of the day had been - Mom’s blue cake, Paul’s comforting handshake, Annabeth’s loving hug and my friends’ warm wishes!

                                                   




                                                           














Monday 13 January 2014

Why Harry Potter’s awesome!

I know there are around ten thousand or so reasons why Harry Potter is popular, entertaining and engrossing, but here I will state the reasons I think are the best!

  • Interesting Plot - Harry Potter was the most popular children’s fiction for ever so long, and I still rate it the best novel I have read, and most of the credit goes to the plot. It is imaginative and well thought-out. Sometimes, you have to think a little to sort a few thing out in your head and sometimes, you can’t wait for the next twist in the story!
  • Perfect Language - Not too simple, not too complex! That’s the language J.K. Rowling uses, and it appeals to children of all ages very much. Reading the books is simply a pleasure, what with the philosophical quotes, laugh-till-you-burst jokes and vivid descriptions!
  • Theme - The story revolves around a young hero who has had a hard life. As we follow his adventures, he learns the most important lessons of life - that friendship matters beyond anything else, courage and determination will take you anywhere, and the most important of all - love conquers all. The lessons it contains are not pushed down your throat, but you definitely know they’re there, and it does change you in a way, reading this series...
  • Characters - Over the course of the story, the characters grow into so much more than they were at first. Unexpected sides are revealed, as with Neville. Unexpected people make a mark on your heart, like Luna. And unexpected twists make you rethink everything you ever thought about a character ( you know and I know whom I’m talking about ).
So that was for people who wanted honest opinions why Harry Potter is definitely worth the read.
Now to come to the more important points!

  • Hermione Granger - I think Harry Potter is one of the very few books that has a female main character whose only job is not just to look beautiful and agree with everything everyone else says (I’m not going to pretend I didn’t just take a dig at Twilight!!)
  • Love - the most powerful magic - Harry Potter is also one of the very few series where love is not the mushy teen romance stuff, but actual love. Love for life, love for friends, love for your own, love for the world in general.
  • There’s Fred and George - You do not just put down a book that involves characters like Fred and George, who can keep you laughing for days together!
  • People all over the world read it - Everyone has heard of Harry Potter. Find me a single teenager who has never heard of the book, and… we all know no such person exists. And yes, Harry Potter has such a large readership over the world, it is taken for granted that it is one of the most popular children’s books, which implies it’s awesome!
I could go on and on forever, but what I really want to know is, do you agree with me? And do you have more reasons to add to my list? As a true Potterhead, I entreat you to answer me honestly and frankly!

Friday 10 January 2014

The Secret Garden

The Secret Garden by Francis Hodgson Burnett is a classic well-loved by children around the world. It was first published in its entirety in 1911 and is now one of Burnett's most popular novels.
It follows the story of Mary Lennox, a young sulky girl of age 10 living in India.
She was taken care of from her birth by servants, since her parents didn't want her and were too busy to care for her themselves. As a result of this, she is spoiled and can't do even the simplest of things by herself.
When her parents die in the cholera epidemic, Mary is sent to live with her uncle, Archibald Craven in Yorkshire, England. He lives in a big house called Misselthwaite Manor, and it is surrounded by gardens and beautiful moorlands. Mary is at first astonished at the way of living in England, but absolutely denies having any interest or curiosity in it. She behaves like her usual self - spoiled, selfish and attention-seeking until she begins to realise slowly that her behaviour will get her nowhere in life. With the help of people she meets at Misselthwaite Manor, she gets over her pettiness and starts gardening to make herself strong and healthy. She soon falls in love with roaming her uncle's courtyards and gardens, talking to the old gardener Ben Weatherstaff and petting his tame robin.
One day, while walking on a new path, she discovers a garden with rose trees but she cannot find the door to it. She finds out from her friend and maid, Martha Sowerby, that the garden was the late Mrs. Craven's. After her death, Mr. Craven locked up the garden and also his soul, in his deepest parts.
Then Mary finds the key to the garden's door accidentally and also the door to the garden. She starts reviving the garden with the help of Martha's brother, Dickon.
One rainy day, when she has to stay in the house and is exploring it, she hears loud wails. When she asks Martha about them, Martha shrugs off her queries. Her curiosity aroused, she sneaks to the room from where the sound seems to be coming in the night and finds a young boy in the bed. Colin is Mr. Craven's son and is proclaimed a hunchback by a relative cum doctor. Colin has to stay in bed for fear that his back may bend and as a result, he has never walked out of his room by himself. Mary takes it to her head to help poor Colin and goes about it secretly.
The secret garden is by now coming on well, and Mary decides to take Colin to the garden without anyone's knowledge. The story continues until Colin not only stands, but runs and is finally cured of his so called 'illness'.
This story amuses you, frustrates you, engages you and teaches you some valuable lessons of life.
So the next time you are asked to review a classic in school, you know which book to pick!

Wednesday 8 January 2014

The Tales of Beedle the Bard

The Tales of Beedle the Bard is the 'Grimms' Fairy Tales' of the magical world. Just like we muggles (I totally don't want to be included in that group, but let's face it - I haven't got my letter yet!) can reel off Cinderella, Sleeping Beauty and Hansel and Gretel by-heart, children of the magical world have heard The Tales Of Beedle the Bard a million times over.
There is not really much difference between Muggle fairy tales and Wizards' fairy tales - both emphasise the victory of good and the downfall of evil, both usually have 'happy endings' and both aim to teach little children the values of life through an interesting means.
But a primary difference is that magic is considered a thing of fairy tales (pun not intended) in Muggle stories and it is this magic that tends to be the root of all problems or fixes. In wizard fairy tales, though, the heores and heroines are adept at magic and yet, they face just as many problems as any other person would and it is finally the goodness of their heart that tides them through difficulty.
And remember that you might say fairy tales are full of miracles ad things which would never happen in everyday life, but children from magical backgrounds also find it hard to believe some of the things that happen in their fairy tales. To make things clearer - in The Tale of the Three Brothers, the appearance of Death in the story seems like fantasy even to Ron, who was exposed to magic since his childhood.
The Tales of Beedle the Bard is a compilation of five famous wizarding stories, "The Wizard and the Hopping Pot", "The Fountain of Fair Fortune", "Babbitty Rabbitty and her Cackling Stump", "The Warlock's Hairy Heart" and "The Tale of the Three Brothers".
After the Harry Potter series was complete, J.K. Rowling made seven handwritten and self-illustrated copies of The Tales of Beedle the Bard and distributed six to people who were deeply involved with Harry Potter. The seventh was sold, and the money was donated to a charity. And then, the book was released in Standard and Paperback form to the public. The book contains commentary from Dumbledore at the end of each tale and his views on each of them.
These stories are amusing, entertaining and contain a storehouse of information about wizards' practices, especially those of the olden times when wizards were not concealed from the world. Dumbledore's commentary provides a world of insight about how the tales were received by the public in general and children especially.
There are also hints to the truth behind the Deathly Hallows in "The Tale of the Three Brothers", which the readers can relate to if they have read Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows.
The Tales of Beedle the Bard may seem like a book meant for a young audience and it probably is, in the wizarding world. Nevertheless, Harry Potter fans will find themselves engrossed while reading the book and of course, need I say it, we all will jump at the chance to read some personal views penned down by Dumbledore himself!

Sources : The Tales of Beedle the Bard
               Wikipedia
                Harry Potter Wiki





Thursday 2 January 2014

The James Potter Series

Are you one of the readers who breezed through the Harry Potter books? Do you want to read more about the wizarding world? Are you crazily hoping J.K. Rowling will write more series like her first?
Well then, the James Potter series is your answer.
It is most definitely fan fiction, but it is like no other fan fiction I have read. Written by G. Norman Lippert (another avid reader and Harry Potter fan), it centres around the first son of Harry Potter, James Sirius Potter.
As we see in '19 years later', the ending of the Harry Potter series, James has been enrolled at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. The series begins with James’ first year at school, where he makes new friends called Zane and Ralph. Zane is a Ravenclaw, Ralph a Slytherin and James, true to his heritage, is a Gryffindor. But this by no means endangers their friendship and soon, they are best buddies. This is when James stumbles upon a deadly secret plot to revive the once-sorcerer Merlinus Ambrosius (yes, the one who features in the famous expression ‘Merlin’s beard!’, and also the one after whom the Order of Merlin is named).
Merlin was known to be a brilliant, inventive wizard but also one who indulged in dark practices.
Some supporters of Lord Voldemort remained even after his death, and they organised secret meetings and open protests against Harry Potter, who was then the Head Auror.
On his first day at Hogwarts, James was smitten by a Slytherin, Tabitha Corsica, but he soon found that she led protests against Harry’s office and opposed her with all his might.
Eventually, the plots of this secret group become exceedingly dangerous and they attempt to bring back to life the powerful Merlin and enlist him to help in their dark schemes.
And this is not even the beginning. James Potter and the Hall of the Elders’ Crossing is followed by James Potter and the Curse of the Gatekeeper. It is very similar in style to Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, but has its own terror and thrill and suspense. The plots intertwine, Voldemort’s influence is felt directly through the books, good fights evil constantly and James is plunged into a world of uncertainty. And all throughout the series, it is easy to see how different James is from his father and yet, how he tries to become the ideal hero and follow in the footsteps of his dad. Gradually, though, he realises he has to be himself and imitating Harry will only get him into trouble.
James has his successes, his failures and his doubts.
And I have to say, if you get through the first book there’s no looking back. There are sorcerers, wizards, teachers, headmasters, giants, children and then there’s destiny.
I’m just dying to tell you write now that Albus is in Slytherin, that Scorpius Malfoy’s in Gryffindor and… okay, just forget that now.
The three schools of the wizarding world are also included, and a new school has been opened in America called Alma Aleron. And it’s very different from Hogwarts, but our heroes have very similar adventures there too.
The books are beautifully written and somehow, I found myself unable to stop reading the books… actually I can’t stop describing them even. And I’m sure you will love them too, especially as they relate a lot more to the original series than one would think and portray a lot of the original characters too. (Yep, Hagrid is James’ best friend too!)

So here’s the link to the James Potter series website, from where you can get details about the books :

http://www.jamespotterseries.com/wizard_index.html

Forever Team Leo!

Leo Valdez is the funniest and coolest character of The Heroes Of Olympus series by Rick Riordan.
There, I said it! No doubt many of you will read this and shake your head with disapproval, but I’m sure there will also be many who completely support me.
So here’s a brief about Leo.
He’s the son of Greek God Hephaestus. His mother was Esperanza Valdez and she died in a fire started by Leo himself in a panic as he tried to save his mother from Gaia, the evil Earth goddess.
Leo has the power of inducing fire in his hands. He is also completely immune to heat. He is awesome at mechanics and making ‘inorganic' objects work.
He is one of the seven heroes chosen on the quest to stop Gaia, and the counsellor of Hephaestus cabin at Camp Halfblood. Apart from that, what can I say… he is just awesome!
Percy Jackson and the Olympians was an amazing series and Percy was an amazing hero, but just as popular and maybe even more is Leo, for being a hero without even meaning to. He is not brainy, he is not muscular, he is not even confident. Yet he is loyal, brave and what’s best - humorous.
Leo can lighten up any situation. He can make his friends feel at ease. He is innocent, yet devilish. His brain is hard-wired into thinking up solutions to problems at the last possible minute and that’s what makes him good to have around in a life-threatening situation.
But that’s not all. There’s just something special about him that makes the readers turn pages until they find out how many more chapters there are before Leo’s viewpoint comes up.
( Uh… I don’t really know who else does that except me, but I’m figuring most people would be waiting eagerly for his chapters ).
Percy, of course, has been my favourite and probably will remain so but Leo has a special spot on my favourite-heroes list, completely apart from the others!
After all, no other Greek demigod is crazy enough to be called Leo-crazy!