Description
Kabir Rathore returns to Devgarh after six years—not for a story, but for truth. His mother’s mysterious death was labeled an accident, but a forbidden diary, a brass key, and the name “Meera” hint at a centuries-old curse lurking beneath Kalka Devi Temple. Meera Sharma, a historian bound to Devgarh’s hidden past, becomes his only hope. Together, they uncover reincarnation, unfinished love, and a shadow that feeds on fear. As supernatural vengeance awakens, Kabir and Meera must face the destiny written for their past selves—Inder and Meera Bai—before Devgarh’s curse consumes them again. Love is their only weapon… but will trust survive the darkness?
Shankar Dhakar is a multilingual fiction author known for his wide range of storytelling — from science fiction and mythology to romance, supernatural thrillers, horror, and cosmic adventures. He creates cinematic, immersive narratives that blend ancient mysteries with futuristic imagination, combining emotional depth with high-action drama.
Fascinated by forgotten legends, sacred temples, reincarnation, cosmic forces, and the deeper layers of human emotion, Shankar writes stories that connect the ancient past with the distant future. His creative process is highly visual — he imagines each scene like a movie sequence, which gives his novels a powerful, cinematic quality.
Shankar draws inspiration from global storytellers like Dan Brown, Brandon Sanderson, Stephen King, Amish Tripathi, Christopher Nolan, and James Cameron. Their approach to world-building and narrative complexity influences his expanding universes, which include mythological thrillers, superhero sagas, space epics, and high-tech action novels.
His books are published and available worldwide on major platforms including Amazon, Google Play Books, Apple Books, Kobo, Barnes & Noble, and many others. As a visionary storyteller, Shankar continues to explore new worlds, new genres, and new emotional dimensions with every book he creates.
He believes in one simple philosophy as a writer:
“Write fearlessly — because imagination has no limits.”