⭐⭐⭐⭐ (4.5/5) Recommended for: Feminist mytho-fiction lovers, Krishna devotees looking for a fresh lens, and anyone who believes queens should forge their own legends.

Here’s a good write-up for Rukmini by Saiswaroopa Iyer, suitable for a blog, Goodreads, or a book review section. In the vast ocean of mythological retellings, certain voices rise above the rest by offering a perspective that feels both radical and necessary. Saiswaroopa Iyer’s Rukmini is one such gem. It takes the princess of Vidarbha—often relegated to the role of a beautiful, passive consort of Krishna—and hands her back her agency, her voice, and her sword.

Rukmini is not just a retelling; it’s a reclamation. Saiswaroopa Iyer proves that devotion need not erase defiance, and that a woman can be both deeply in love and deeply in command of her own fate. By the last page, you won’t just admire Rukmini—you’ll want to raise a banner for her.

The pacing dips slightly in the middle, where the political maneuvering occasionally overshadows the emotional arc. Also, if you expect a scene-by-scene literal translation of the Bhagavata Purana, this is not that. Iyer takes creative liberties—always in service of the character’s dignity.

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