User:Prasantha Kumar

Love Anthems

By Anju Prasad

= Description =

=== PWhen words become magical, it seems verses form butterflies and wild lotuses, like a dream come true. This book is a journey into your innate self; that is love-the love that is mystic, divine, and mesmerizing. Come with me, holding my hand, on this irresistible voyage where souls speak unto each other. It shares the mantra that you can-anyone can-just love for love's sake. Breaking the barriers of conventions and convictions, this book is an adventure, a path unique, a road less travelled. All those who read it will realize how love can be sensual, sacred, and sanctified. Reading it will be an unforgettable experience. ===

About the Author
Anju Prasad was born on 1 January 1976 to a middle-class Indian family. She belonged to orthodox Kerala tradition. She did her schooling in Kerala. Having lost her mother at the very young age of five, Anju resorted to reading as a child. She wanted to be a laureate in English literature, but due to unforeseen circumstances, she ended up in a medical profession with a master's degree in community health. Even though her work kept her away from the world of books, Anju never left her aspirations to read and write. She was a winner in many literary competitions. She wrote in many dailies. She has published a collection of poetry in her mother tongue. Anju loved the works of Emily Dickinson, Sylvia Plath, Maya Angelou, and Rabindranath Tagore. Anju is a member of many associations worldwide. She is a philanthropist. Her poems emanate from her innate ability to love humanity. By Mr Radhakrishnan Narayanapilla, retired general manager, BSNL, India

Review by Blueinkreview

Anju Prasad’s Love Anthems is a collection of poems that are romantic, dreamy, and mystical in tone and atmosphere. They are often marked by hope and a focus on the delicacy and strength of womanhood. Some contain cultural imagery from India, the author’s homeland.

Many of the poems are indeed “love anthems,” and Prasad uses figurative language to express the exquisite and sensual nature of romantic intimacy. “Me, Your Eternal Love” is a good example: “I rain, drizzle, and like a peacock feather stroke you gently./ I just sit, never letting my eyes quiver as the lanterns of your hopes burn in them.”

Such metaphors give the poems vitality, but sometimes they are overfamiliar and florid, as in “Give Me Thy Love,” which begins: “Though it poisons me right at the heart,/ infecting me cell by cell,/ in it lies my salvation,/ churning my bitter soul…”. Words such as “poison,” “heart,” “bitter,” “soul” are overused in love poems and sometimes lend a generic, adolescent flavor to this volume.

Some of the pieces are more prose/lecture-like, doing more telling than showing. The most original generally aren’t love poems, such as “Snake and Ladder,” which conveys religious ideas, making use of musical techniques, such as repetition and alliteration. In the middle of this one-page poem without stanza breaks —an appropriate shape for a poem about snakes and ladders—Prasad uses sound and simple declarative statements to her advantage: “The karma defines the births and rebirths./ Between right and wrong,/ the midway of sin and sanctity,/ there is a snake and ladder, like/ a way – breakthrough.”

Love Anthems is an enjoyable book, in that there is a real sense of the person behind the poems, a woman who isn’t afraid to be vulnerable and share the “wildfire” and “wilderness” in her soul. While these poems don’t achieve great literary sophistication, readers looking for enthusiastic love poems and a feminine Indian perspective may find some delights here.