Reason for Reading: Next in the series.
Summary: Tara and her brother, Suraj, along with his friend, have
gone to the local fair. There they befriend the Ferris wheel
operator, an overweight yet very friendly boy and a performer who
can dislocate all his joints to fit inside small containers along
with his little sister helper, Sadia. While there, a scream rips
through the fairgrounds and the girl, a fair person who can see as
day in the night, who was looking after Sadia screams that Sadia
was taken from her by a hyena into the jungle. Tara herself had
earlier thought she had seen a hyena but shrugged it off as a trick
of the sun as hyenas do not live in these parts. Men quickly start
organizing a search party when Tara realizes that her brother and
his friend are missing too and when a scrap of his shirt is found
on a bush they know he was taken too. Thus the story is set up as
Tara and her new found friends, along with a familiar face from
book one take matters into their own hands and set off into the
jungle to find the missing children only to find out that it is all
a carefully orchestrated plan to lure Tara herself into the
clutches of her evil nemesis, Zarku. Only this time her brother's
life may be the sacrifice to rid the world of this evil once and
for all.
Comments: The second book in this trilogy jumps right into the
action and does not let go until the very end. A very fast-paced
plot-driven novel that kept me reading well into the night. The
book is not quite so dark as the first in the series but is, even
so, still dark with death and imagery. After the brief beginning in
the fairgrounds, the entire story takes place within the jungle
which serves to add a heavy, broody, stifling atmosphere throughout
as the teens deal with the heat and humidity, mosquitoes and
thirst. The plot itself is what I call the "race against time"
theme where the characters set off to save someone and event after
event happens until the final climax. Thus, there is not a lot of
character development in the new characters introduced in this
book. The heavy set boy and the night seeing girl were the most
fully realized and I developed feelings for them. On the other hand
the boy who's sister was taken plays a more important role in the
story, yet he felt flat to me and I didn't connect with him. But
otherwise, I really enjoyed the band of teens and the various
personalities make for great dynamics within the group.
Tara, herself, is given the most powerful characteristics. Along
with how we've come to know her from book one, she is a strong
girl, with family loyalty and honour high in her values along with
responsibility, fairness and a willingness to believe in others.
Tara is faced with many dilemnas such as choosing between: the one
or the many, a life of evil or death and sacrificing herself or
losing time by going for help. Choosing the right thing is not easy
nor is it always obvious.
One can't help but write about a sequel and not compare it to the
first and here I found that while "The Third Eye" was steeped in
Hindu mythology, this book does not follow through with that though
it is still present, just in a smaller degree. There is no
mistaking though that the story takes place within a Hindu society
as the culture is ever present throughout and this is one of the
exciting things about this series, making it so different from the
usual YA fantasy fare being written at the moment. There is even a
glossary at the back for all the Hindi words used in the book. I
wonder if I can get my sister to start calling me Didi?
The cover is also quite intriguing. I think it reflects the ethnic
flavour of the story well and the picture reminds me of a simple
henna drawing. While being the second in a series the story can
hold up on its own. References are made to events in the first book
but the story here is complete within itself having a beginning and
an ending. I always appreciate when authors can make the second
book of a trilogy a complete story of its own while continuing to
be a part of the whole (no cliffhangers please!). Ms. Narsimhan
does this very well by bringing this story to a conclusion and then
giving readers a taste by setting up the direction the next book
will take. The last few lines of the book left me with a gleeful
chuckle and shiver as I look forward to the final 'showdown' in the
last book.