At the recent conference in Texas, of the Bhutanese Global Literary Organization, Desh Subba and I spent two and half days talking off and on, and we exchanged giving each other our books. He gave me his 2015 novel, first he has had translated into English. I just started reading it tonight and it is interesting; I'll have a lot more to say on this work after I finish, but already I am intrigued by how he has come up with this literary vehicle to promote fearism as a philosophy of fear management and transformation.
I would call this book a piece of curriculum for fear management/education for the 21st century. It just so happens, I see that it is about an Indigenous person and their tribe and struggles in Nepal, and how Desh as author has a transformation in store for the protagonist.
The back of the book cover says:
This is a [fiction] novel based on "Philosophy of Fearism," showing the vivid picture of how fear occurs and how it can be minimized; how do people escape from fear, and put the best effort into it in order to get rid of it. Earlier, nobody paid attention to the fact that we all are consumers, victims and healers of fear.
It is a live experimental book of indigenous people Limbus, Kirats of Nepal, who possess Stone Age culture, language, religion and belief. They believe that they were originated on this soil. They ruled Nepal for 32 generations in history. After they were defeated by Lichchhabi king, they moved to the eastern part of Nepal and to the north east of India.
This book is a combination of fearism, history and beauty.
The image I uploaded here is manipulated by me for artistic fun and I added the FM logo and some highlights to zap up this cover and also to show how I believe this work is a good piece of curriculum for those who want to understand the Fearlessness Movement worldwide.
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