
Siṃhī: The Becoming - Hardcover
Siṃhī: The Becoming - Hardcover
$43.00
/

products.product.pickup_availability.unavailable
Your payment information is processed securely. We do not store credit card details nor have access to your credit card information.
by Mateo Rose (Author)
Some books are read. Some are told. Some are carried.
This one was written to be all three.
✦ ✦ ✦
Siṃhī The Becoming is the story of a young lioness who loses her mother in a storm and finds shelter in a cave - where a wise serpent, knowing she is afraid, begins to tell her a story. And in that story, there is another story. And in that one, another still.
What begins as a fable at the mouth of a cave opens, across thirteen books, into something larger: a literary novel about becoming, composed in the old Indian tradition of nested wisdom stories - a tradition that has passed from parent to child, teacher to student, around fires for thousands of years.
Each book meets Siṃhī at a different threshold. A tortoise who held a mountain from below while the worlds were churned above him. A serpent who swallowed the poison of the world and held it in his throat. A squirrel who worked beside an army and would not be waved off. A warrior who entered a circle he had learned only half the way to leave. A woman who walked with Death itself and bargained in words so precise Death stopped walking. A charioteer whose old teaching - spoken once on a battlefield - arrives in her life at the moment she most needs to hear it.
Sanskrit verses close each book - the oṃ of the mantra, the adveṣṭā sarvabhūtānāṃ of the Gītā, the Gāyatrī her mother chanted into the dark. They are not ornaments. They are the sound the tradition makes when the story has arrived where the story was going.
✦ ✦ ✦
At its heart, it is a book about a young creature who does not know where she came from, and the long slow discovery of what love leaves behind.
It is also a book about what a parent gives a child before leaving. What a teacher gives a student by the way they carry what cannot be carried. What a story can hold that a single life cannot.
Along the way, Siṃhī meets figures who carry the oldest questions. What is innocence, and what ends it. What is power, and whether it belongs to the one who holds it. What cannot be undone, and how a life is built anyway. Grief arrives. Injustice arrives. Loss arrives in forms the young lioness has no preparation for. And still she moves - not because the world becomes safe, but because something in her refuses to stop.
This is not a soft book, though it is a tender one. Grief is met, not avoided. Loss is real. The old stories do what old stories do - hold, across generations, the things no single life can hold alone.
✦ ✦ ✦
For readers of Madeline Miller's Circe, Ursula K. Le Guin's Earthsea, and Clarissa Pinkola Estés's Women Who Run With the Wolves. For readers of Marilynne Robinson, Richard Adams, and the old Indian fables themselves.
A parent reading aloud. A seeker reading alone at night. A reader of the Indian tradition who wants to see it treated with the seriousness it deserves. A reader who comes for the lioness and stays for what the lioness comes to understand.
This is Siṃhī's becoming. In following hers, you may find yourself remembering your own.



















