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Sameer Gudhate Presents the Book Review of The Chola Tigers: Avengers of Somnath by Amish Tripathi

  • Writer: Sameer Gudhate
    Sameer Gudhate
  • 2 hours ago
  • 3 min read

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Imagine this: it’s late at night, the world outside is quiet, and I promise myself, “Just one more chapter.” You know where this is going—I didn’t stop. That’s what Amish Tripathi’s The Chola Tigers: Avengers of Somnath did to me. And honestly, I’m glad I let the hours slip, because this book feels like sitting by a fire while an old storyteller spins a tale of vengeance, courage, and a nation that refused to be broken.

 

Amish has always had a knack for reimagining Indian history and myth, whether it’s Shiva walking among mortals in The Immortals of Meluha or King Suheldev defending his people against foreign invaders. This time, he takes us to 1025 CE, right after Mahmud of Ghazni’s brutal sack of Somnath. Picture the temple in ruins, the sacred Shiva Linga shattered, the people devastated. And then—out of those ashes—a vow of retribution. Enter Emperor Rajendra Chola, already one of history’s greats, assembling a band of unlikely allies: a Tamil warrior, a Gujarati merchant, a devout follower of Lord Ayyappa, and a scholar-emperor from Malwa. Together, they set out on a mission not just to punish Ghazni, but to remind Bharat of her unyielding spirit. It’s the kind of setup that makes your pulse quicken even before the battles begin.

 

The writing? Pure Amish. Fast, cinematic, and unapologetically dramatic. His prose isn’t about pausing to admire the poetry—it’s about thrusting you headfirst into the action. You feel the clang of swords, the rush of horses, the hushed prayers before a charge. The pacing rarely lets up. A few times, I almost wished he slowed down, let me linger in the world of the Cholas a bit longer. But then again, that urgency matches the heartbeat of the story.

 

What surprised me most was the team itself. Each character carries a different fragment of India’s soul, and together they form something bigger. The merchant’s pragmatism, the warrior’s raw fire, the devotee’s quiet strength, the scholar’s intellect, and Rajendra Chola’s sheer authority—there’s a certain joy in seeing these threads woven together. Not all of them get equal weight (I wanted more of Rajendra himself, truth be told), but even in brief flashes, their courage and flaws leave a mark.

 

The plot moves like an arrow—straight, swift, and sharp. There’s the inevitable “revenge mission” predictability at times, but Amish adds enough heart and high stakes to keep you invested. The Battle of Khuzdar, for instance, crackles with energy. I could almost smell the dust, hear the war cries, feel the tension before the first sword struck.

 

At its core, though, this isn’t just about fighting. It’s about unity born from tragedy. The theme of “we are one” pulses through the book, maybe a little too insistently at times, but it struck me nonetheless. Reading it, I found myself thinking of our own world today—how divided we often feel, how fractured. And here’s this story from a thousand years ago whispering: together, we endure. Alone, we fall. That hit me harder than I expected.

 

Strengths? The sheer momentum, the evocative battle scenes, the way Amish captures the grandeur of the Chola Empire and contrasts it with the blood-stained opulence of Ghazni’s court. Weaknesses? The predictability of some twists, and a writing style that occasionally feels a tad modern for its 11th-century setting. But those are quibbles in an otherwise stirring ride.

 

For me, this book felt like a spiritual cousin to Suheldev. In fact, I liked it better. It doesn’t try to be profound philosophy—it doesn’t need to. It’s here to remind us of courage, dharma, and resistance against impossible odds. If you’re a fan of historical fiction with a mythic edge, or if you’ve ever wanted to see Rajendra Chola imagined as the avenger of Somnath, this will scratch that itch beautifully.

 

Closing the book, I couldn’t help but smile at one thought: Mahmud of Ghazni may have believed he broke Bharat’s spirit, but stories like these show it was never really broken. And maybe that’s why we still tell them.

 

I’d give The Chola Tigers: Avengers of Somnath a strong 4 out of 5. Pick it up—you might just lose a night’s sleep, and gain a story worth carrying.

 

 

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