BOOK DETAILS :
- Publisher : Evincepub Publishing
- Publication date : 16 September 2025
- Edition : First Edition
- Print length : 69 pages
- ISBN-10 : 9373350072
- ISBN-13 : 978-9373350073
ABOUT THE AUTHOR :
BOOK REVIEW :
If Buddhi asks us to think, Ahamkara asks us to look into the mirror and stay there.
The second book in The Origin of the Ten Fires series shifts its focus from intellect to something far more volatile: ego. Rahul Manghat takes on Ahamkara not as a villain, but as a force; ancient, necessary, and dangerously seductive when left unchecked. This is a book about identity, power, reflection, and the quiet moment when self-belief slips into self-obsession.
What stands out immediately is the thematic confidence of this book. Each chapter feels like a layered meditation on the many faces we wear, titles we claim, reflections we protect, and shadows we refuse to acknowledge. The narrative unfolds like an inward journey, where the battleground isn’t just the world outside, but the self that looks back at us.
Unlike conventional self-help, Ahamkara doesn’t preach. It shows. Through symbolic settings, psychological conflicts, and carefully crafted confrontations, the story explores how ego can be both a source of strength and a catalyst for division. Pride empowers, but it also isolates. Identity gives direction, but it can imprison. The book constantly balances this tension, making the reading experience deeply introspective.
The prose is deliberate and thoughtful, often slowing the reader down, forcing pauses, reflection, and discomfort. There’s a mythic undertone to the storytelling, yet it feels strikingly modern, especially in how it examines ambition, rivalry, and the fragile bonds between individuals. As characters wrestle with their own reflections, the reader is subtly invited to do the same.
As the second installment in a ten-book arc, Ahamkara expands the universe introduced in Buddhi while standing firmly on its own. It deepens the philosophical foundation of the series, proving that each Fire will not merely tell a story; but challenge a part of who we are.
Who should read this book?
• Readers drawn to spiritual fiction with psychological depth
• Those interested in ego, identity, and self-mastery
• Fans of symbolic, thought-driven narratives
• Anyone on a journey of personal transformation and self-inquiry
🔥 Ahamkara – The Origin of the Ten Fires reminds us that ego is not the enemy, but an untrained one is. To master it is to grow. To be consumed by it is to disappear behind our own reflection.



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