BOOK DETAILS :
- Publisher : Evincepub Publishing
- Publication date : 3 November 2025
- Edition : First Edition
- Print length : 57 pages
- ISBN-10 : 9373357336
- ISBN-13 : 978-9373357331
ABOUT THE AUTHOR :
BOOK REVIEW :
If Buddhi awakened thought and Ahamkara confronted identity, Chitta forces us to remember.
The third installment in The Origin of Ten Fires series turns inward once again; this time into the most intimate and dangerous territory of all: memory. Rahul Manghat explores Chitta not merely as recollection, but as a living force, one that shapes identity, fuels attachment, and quietly dictates destiny.
From the very beginning, the tone feels mythic yet deeply psychological. The story frames memory as something sacred and volatile, born from the first desire to remember oneself. But as impressions accumulate, memory transforms from survival tool into invisible chain. And that is where this book finds its emotional weight.
What makes Chitta compelling is its layered symbolism. Memory here is not passive, it breathes, binds, whispers. It stitches the present to forgotten choices, past alliances, and unresolved wounds. Characters are not simply facing external conflicts; they are confronting echoes of who they once were. The narrative constantly asks:
Are we defined by what we remember, or imprisoned by it?
As secrets resurface and buried truths demand recognition, relationships fracture under revelation. The earlier Fires, intellect and ego, flicker under the pressure of remembrance. It’s fascinating to watch how Manghat weaves continuity across the series, showing how each Fire does not exist alone but tests and reshapes the others.
Stylistically, the prose is contemplative and atmospheric. This is not fast-paced fantasy — it is philosophical fiction that requires emotional presence. The pacing encourages pause. Reflection. Discomfort. And that is intentional. Because memory, like fire, can warm, or consume.
One of the most powerful themes in this book is the tension between remembrance and release. To remember is to reclaim power. But to cling is to suffer. And in that delicate space between healing and haunting, Chitta finds its true strength.
As the third book in a ten-part arc, this installment deepens the spiritual architecture of the series. It moves from thinking (Buddhi) to identity (Ahamkara) to legacy (Chitta). Each Fire grows more personal. More intimate. More dangerous.
Who should read this?
• Readers drawn to spiritual fiction with emotional depth
• Those exploring memory, trauma, and self-identity
• Fans of symbolic storytelling rooted in Indic philosophy
• Anyone on a journey of inner healing and self-inquiry
🔥 Chitta:The Origin of Ten Fires reminds us that the past is never silent. It waits. It shapes. It returns. And the real question is not whether we remember; but whether we are strong enough to let go.

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