Visionary writers.

February 19, 2026

A character in an Orwell’s novel claims that the British empire is benign and it should become like the German one to become more effective… Another in A Maupassant’s novel returns from a colony and finds life stultifying and suffocating in Paris, as in Arab as a French soldier in a colony, entering an Arabian house and kill a few Arabs was normal, besides raping a woman of the house hold, for him…

Some authors were the source behind the change in sensitivities which led to the end of colonialism, as it was once. Now we need similar visionaries to make it really a free world for all.

A new world

February 18, 2026

The world is not looking ahead to a world where the two leading economies are only growing–while themselves in deep debts–while the world is bankrupt three and a half times over. That world is gone forever and can not be resurrected–in order to be there. So are gone the half-baked academic theories which brought the world to such a pass. Something genuinely new is taking shape leaving one breathless with possibilities in sight.

The process is painful for many quarters deeply invested the existing scheme of things. But the inevitable change is good for those too in the long run, if they are able to fit-in–in the new world. But they will not lead the change anymore.

There is a new crop of visionary people already in charge, in different disciplines of human civilization.

It all happened just prior to it all has annihilated itself, thankfully.

Promotional copy

February 12, 2026

Down load tomorrow a free copy in your Kindle.

A glass of Yak’s Blood: reviewed by Copilot.

February 6, 2026

Here’s a literary-style review of A Glass of Yak’s Blood by Vumika V, written as if we’re analyzing it in a seminar or book club:


Literary Review of A Glass of Yak’s Blood

Style & Voice

Vumika V writes in a straightforward yet emotionally charged prose, capturing the inner turbulence of Rajib’s midlife crisis. The language is not ornamental—it’s functional, almost journal-like—but this simplicity allows the rawness of betrayal, longing, and disillusionment to come through.

Themes

  • Midlife Disillusionment: Rajib’s struggles with health, career, and family reflect the universal anxieties of middle age.
  • Love & Betrayal: His relationship with Gitu is both an escape and a trap, showing how desire can be both liberating and destructive.
  • Survival vs. Desire: The metaphor of “yak’s blood” suggests something primal—survival in harsh conditions—yet the novel situates this against the backdrop of modern urban life, where survival is emotional rather than physical.
  • Societal Critique: The novel quietly critiques the transactional nature of relationships, where wealth and security often outweigh love and loyalty.

Symbolism

The title itself—A Glass of Yak’s Blood—is a metaphor for raw necessity. Just as drinking yak’s blood in Himalayan survival tales is about enduring extreme conditions, Rajib’s choices are about enduring the emotional coldness of his life. The act of drinking becomes symbolic of compromise, sacrifice, and the cost of survival in relationships.

Strengths

  • Honest portrayal of flawed characters.
  • Juxtaposition of Himalayan imagery with urban crises.
  • A narrative that feels both personal and universal.

Limitations

  • The prose can feel plain at times, lacking the lyrical depth some readers expect from literary fiction.
  • Gitu’s character is more symbolic than fully fleshed out, which may frustrate readers looking for balance in perspective.

Reader’s Guide

This novel will resonate most with:

  • Readers interested in psychological realism.
  • Those drawn to relationship dramas with moral ambiguity.
  • Anyone curious about how cultural metaphors (like yak’s blood) can be used to frame modern crises.

If you’d like, I can also craft a concept map of the novel—showing how its themes, characters, and symbols interconnect visually. That way, you’d have a structured breakdown of its literary architecture. Would you like me to do that?

The Underclass lover

January 28, 2026

https://youtube.com/@krishnabhatt3377?si=JYe3AmoRfAEJCzWw

Literature and politics

January 8, 2026
A total literary loss - Peoples' Review

K.C. Bhatt’s writings often reflect deep insights into literature, politics, and contemporary issues, garnering mixed reviews from readers and critics alike.

Overview of K.C. Bhatt’s Work

K.C. Bhatt is known for his thought-provoking essays and critiques that often delve into the intersections of literature, politics, and societal issues. His writing style is characterized by a reflective and analytical approach, which invites readers to engage with complex themes.

Key Themes and Reception

  1. Literary Critique: In his piece discussing Salman Rushdie, Bhatt reflects on the disconnect between literary acclaim and actual readership. He critiques how prominent figures may praise works they haven’t fully engaged with, highlighting a broader issue in literary culture. 1
  2. Contemporary Issues: Bhatt’s writings often address current events, such as the impact of the pandemic on society and literature. He notes how the pandemic has revealed the fragility of human systems and the resilience of nature, prompting a reevaluation of priorities in literature and life. 1
  3. Emotional Engagement: Bhatt discusses the emotional weight of reading works by authors like V.S. Naipaul and Philip Roth, emphasizing how their narratives resonate with readers on a personal level. He reflects on the sadness that accompanies the loss of such influential voices in literature. 1
  4. Political Commentary: His commentary extends to political landscapes, such as the situation in Sri Lanka, where he analyzes the complexities of governance and public sentiment. This reflects his ability to intertwine literary analysis with political critique. 1
  5. Social Media and Technology: Bhatt also engages with contemporary issues surrounding social media, discussing its implications for society and the potential for misuse. He raises questions about privacy and the ethical responsibilities of technology companies. 1
  6. ImageImage5 Sources

Conclusion

K.C. Bhatt’s work is marked by a blend of literary critique, political analysis, and reflections on contemporary issues. His writings provoke thought and discussion, making him a significant voice in the literary landscape. Readers appreciate his ability to connect literature with real-world events, although opinions on his style and perspectives may vary. Overall, Bhatt’s contributions continue to resonate with those interested in the deeper implications of literature and society.

{Copilot.}

Covid: A Blessing in Disguise?

November 26, 2025

The trade surplus of China was around 300 billion dollars in 2019 with the USA and the rest of the world each. In the year 2024 it had plummeted to less than a hundred billion dollars with the USA and had increased to nearly a trillion dollars with the rest of the world.

In the year 2025 it has again reached to 25 billion dollars a month with the USA while with the rest of the world it has already crossed a trillion dollars by Oct itself. So, Thankfully, world trade is diversifying fairly and sustainably.

The share of the global trade between the two leading economies has declined to a quarter which had been double than that for many years earlier. While the world trade is showing a healthy growth of around 3%.

Hitherto the two leading economies were in league to mutually grow but put the rest of the world in distress. Now for the first time the decoupling has taken place between them to find newer and more profitable trade partners. So they are the rival in real sense economically too.

For the rest of the world it is a good news, which was under recession for many decades now–in real terms. It will create a political stability and a greater security through out the world mainly due to bringing out it–out of recession.

The strange thing is that the Chinese contribution to the world GDP growth still remains three times than that of the USA at 31%. Which is not a very desirable situation as it will create another balloon of growth which may not last long. However, with the diversification of the global trade this might change to become more equitable for the remaining partners.

It has been not a good news for all that the world economy is turning a new page. So some quarters want it to go back to its earlier state so that they may not be needed to reform and change as per the changing times.

But slowly a realization is taking place on them as well, that it is not going to be reversible process.

Possible the Covid pandemic had given the world a much needed shock to see that the world we had then was imperfect on many counts. So it was a blessing in disguise in a way.

The youthful age

November 18, 2025

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/13147439-olifantenpolo

THANKS CHATGPT: For putting up so much hope

August 1, 2025

Certainly. Here’s a hypothetical literary review of the novel Bel Ami by K. C. Bhatt, imagining it as a reinterpretation or modern homage to Guy de Maupassant’s original, but shaped by Bhatt’s unique perspective and possibly set in a different socio-political landscape:

Review of Bel Ami by K. C. Bhatt: A Seductive Mirror to Ambition in the Postcolonial Age

By a Hypothetical Reviewer from The New Literary Review

K. C. Bhatt’s Bel Ami is a daring, sharply observant reimagining of Maupassant’s 19th-century novel of the same name, repurposed for a world grappling with new hierarchies, fractured morality, and the slippery terrains of media, politics, and identity in the postcolonial age.

Where Maupassant’s Georges Duroy climbed the social ladder of Parisian society with cunning charm and unapologetic opportunism, Bhatt’s protagonist—Devendra “Dev” Rana—navigates a contemporary South Asian metropolis with similar seductive ease, but under vastly different pressures. Dev, an ex-army man turned journalist, mirrors Duroy’s hunger for status and control, but Bhatt infuses him with a more introspective struggle, questioning whether self-invention is empowerment or simply another mask in a society that rewards duplicity.

Bhatt’s prose—at once supple and ironic—moves with the confidence of someone deeply familiar with both the classical European tradition and the nuances of the South Asian elite. The novel is not content with being a mere homage; it critiques the very system that enables a “Bel Ami” to thrive. Dev’s rise is paved not only with affairs and betrayals, but also with ghostwritten editorials, NGO scams, and elite salons where old colonial residues still inform new loyalties.

Female characters in Bhatt’s Bel Ami are not merely instruments of the protagonist’s advancement, as they largely were in Maupassant’s version. Bhatt paints them with complexity—Maya, the editor’s wife, is a disillusioned academic with her own quiet manipulations; Samira, a political fixer, navigates power structures with a Machiavellian grace. They challenge Dev even as they enable him, and Bhatt allows them space for anger, irony, and reinvention.

What makes Bel Ami resonate in Bhatt’s hands is his understanding that charm—especially male charm—is a cultural currency with both erotic and political value. In a world where ideology is often performative and journalism becomes theatre, Dev becomes a mirror to readers: seductive, disturbing, and familiar.

This is not a novel that seeks moral resolution. Rather, Bhatt, with his characteristic wry intelligence, leaves readers complicit. As we watch Dev win, we are left to ask: what has he really won, and at what cost to the rest of us?

Verdict:

K. C. Bhatt’s Bel Ami is a brilliantly executed, politically astute novel that echoes Maupassant while delivering a bold critique of modern ambition. Essential reading for those interested in the intersections of media, masculinity, and moral ambiguity in contemporary literature.

Would you like a version of this review written from the perspective of a specific author (e.g., Salman Rushdie, Jhumpa Lahiri, or someone else), or as it would appear in a South Asian literary magazine?

Balzac meets Naipaul in Nepal

June 19, 2025


a hypothetical Review by V. S. Naipaul
On Krishna Bhatt’s “Delhi Return”

There is in Delhi Return a hunger not just for the city, but for comprehension. Krishna Bhatt writes with an intimacy born of participation, and yet the gaze remains lucid, occasionally bruising, and—thankfully—unsentimental. This is not a novel that flatters its setting. Delhi is neither exoticized nor dismissed; instead, it is made to stand trial: history, hubris, heat, and haunted ambition all grumble beneath the asphalt.

Bhatt’s narrator—neither entirely a cynic nor a romantic—wanders through the bureaucratic corridors and existential smog of India’s capital with a kind of weary astonishment. In this sense, the novel feels like reportage disguised as fiction, a trope I once thought reserved for those of us on the periphery of belonging. But Bhatt belongs too much—to language, to lineage, to loss—and from that paradox he carves meaning.

What is returned to Delhi is not merely a man, but an awareness of its decay and duplicity, and the novel excels when it leans into this ambivalence. If there is anything lacking here, it is perhaps the author’s unwillingness to wholly surrender to despair. The resilience of the human characters—drawn with affection, even when grotesque—hints at a kind of subterranean optimism. It is affecting, though not always convincing.

Still, I am impressed. There is in Bhatt’s prose a seriousness about life that is fast disappearing from fiction, especially fiction that dares to take India as more than metaphor. Delhi Return does not offer comfort. What it offers, instead, is something rarer: recognition.

—V. S. Naipaul (hypothetically)


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