why do you like the book rani lakshmi bai the valliant queen of jhansi
Answers
Answer:
Because it s very interested story
Explanation:
THE name Rani Lakshmibai or Jhansi ki Rani, as she was more popularly known, evokes memories of a quick paragraph in stuffy history textbooks. We know that she was brave, that she was one of the few women known to history who fought the British fearlessly, that she died a martyr, and that her name is inextricably linked to India's freedom struggle. So one wonders, what could possibly fill 125 pages of a book on the Rani's life? A lot, as Deepa Agarwal reveals!
The book is a chronological account of the Rani's life, starting from her precocious childhood, her unexpected wedding into a royal family, her innate talent for state affairs and administration, her discipline and physical rigour, to the 1857 Indian Mutiny, her visceral understanding of military strategy, her compassion, her despair, and most of all, her love for Jhansi that almost always leads the way.
As the events unfold in the Rani's life, you see what a pillar of strength she really was, and realise that adjectives like 'brave' or 'valiant' simply don't do enough justice to the Rani's undeniable charisma. The narrative, that is a little sluggish in the beginning with historical dates and characters, picks up steam by Chapter 4, and maintains the pace till the every end. Deepa's account, especially of the battle scenes with the British are extraordinary, giving us a clear picture of the electric atmosphere of Jhansi and India at the time.