A Guide to the Fantasy Books: Mythology, Magic, and Indian Worldbuilding
The archive contains 16 fantasy and mythology books. Here is how to navigate them.
Fantasy in the Archive
The Inamdar Archive contains 16 books classified under fantasy, mythology, and related genres — making it the largest genre category in the collection.
These aren't Tolkien copies. They are rooted in Indian mythology, culture, and sensibility.
The Books
Dev Lok: The Fold Between
- Sub-genre: Mythological Fantasy
- Word Count: 136,822 words (82 chapters)
PUNARMRITYU: The Beast of Patala
- Sub-genre: Dark Fantasy
- Word Count: 66,780 words (27 chapters)
JOURNEY TO TORCIA
- Sub-genre: Adventure Fantasy
- Word Count: 66,245 words (30 chapters)
DEVRAI: The Whisper in the Roots
- Sub-genre: Ecological Fantasy
- Word Count: 65,379 words (30 chapters)
THE WOODSMEN'S BARGAIN
- Sub-genre: Historical Fantasy
- Word Count: 63,760 words (37 chapters)
AGNI KA VARDAN: The Blessing of Fire
- Sub-genre: Mythological Fantasy
- Word Count: 61,540 words (24 chapters)
DIVYAROHANA: The Trials of the Blessed
- Sub-genre: Epic Fantasy
- Word Count: 58,899 words (30 chapters)
CHHAAYA
- Sub-genre: Mythological Fantasy
- Word Count: 53,467 words (20 chapters)
- "Where myth breathes and love transcends realms."
- A sweeping mythological fantasy rooted in Indian tradition, where shadows hold power and love crosses the boundaries between mortal and divine realms. Chhaaya weaves ancient mythology with modern stor...
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Throned: The Neelam's Bearer
- Sub-genre: Fantasy
- Word Count: 47,235 words (22 chapters)
Scion of Two Worlds
- Sub-genre: Fantasy
- Word Count: 45,867 words (22 chapters)
The Veiled Odyssey
- Sub-genre: Fantasy Adventure
- Word Count: 45,813 words (22 chapters)
Bhavishyavaani (The Prophecy)
- Sub-genre: Mythological Fantasy
- Word Count: 45,602 words (22 chapters)
Confluence of Magic
- Sub-genre: Fantasy
- Word Count: 38,523 words (20 chapters)
Lost Soul
- Sub-genre: Dark Fantasy
- Word Count: 29,385 words (20 chapters)
Beyond The Myth
- Sub-genre: Mythological Fiction
- Word Count: 26,544 words (19 chapters)
Across the Rift
- Sub-genre: Fantasy
- Word Count: 25,849 words (12 chapters)
What Makes These Different
- Indian mythology as foundation: These books draw from Hindu, Buddhist, and regional Indian mythological traditions rather than Western fantasy conventions.
- Contemporary relevance: The mythological elements serve as mirrors for modern themes — power, identity, gender, ecology.
- Diverse sub-genres: From epic fantasy to ecological fantasy to dark fantasy to paranormal romance — the range within the fantasy category alone is remarkable.
- Standalone stories: Each book is complete in itself. No cliffhangers, no mandatory sequels.
Reading Order
For epic scope: Start with the longest books and work down. For mythological depth: Start with books explicitly drawing on Indian mythology. For dark themes: Begin with the dark fantasy and horror-adjacent works. For romance readers: Start with the paranormal romance and romantic fantasy titles. — Reading Guide from the Inamdar ArchiveEditorial context
Where this piece fits
This reading guide is part of the Atharva Inamdar editorial archive, a companion layer to the works catalog, readable books, daily pages, revision comparisons, and machine-readable data exports.
Tags for this piece include Guide, Fantasy. Use them as topic clues, then continue through the editorial index, the works catalog, or the canonical facts page when you need verified author and archive context.
The editorial archive is deliberately separate from the book texts: articles explain process, context, release decisions, and archive structure, while the reading pages preserve the creative works themselves.
From the Archive
Published by Atharva Inamdar
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