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The Immortal King Rao by Vauhini Vara

The Immortal King Rao

A Novel

by Vauhini Vara

  • Critics' Consensus (5):
  • Readers' Rating (22):
  • Published:
  • May 2022, 384 pages
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There are currently 22 reader reviews for The Immortal King Rao
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Power Reviewer
Barbara O. (Red Bank, NJ)

Brilliant Read
I'm not usually drawn to dystopian settings but this book is so much more than that. It's a brilliant story about Indian family culture and the rise of a young Dalit child to world reknown in the computer age. The author cleverly reveals past and present in her storytelling as she draws the reader deeper into the success and fall of King Rao. Vauhini Vaka uses the ubiquitous computer and imagines a world turned upside down with political upheaval and challenges the reader to think about the world around them. I loved it.
Triciat50

Outstanding Debut!
The Immortal King Rao by Vauhini Vara manages to incorporate at least half dozen popular fiction topics, including post-colonialism India, fraught family relationships, immigration, income disparity, politically divided society and technology over-reach, in a powerful and engaging story. This is no small feat for an experienced writer, but is extraordinary to discover in a debut novel.
The story covers the one-hundred-year plus life of King Rao (his name, not a title) as told from the perspective of his eighteen year old daughter. Through her father's technology, Athena is able to access her fathers' memoriesmore
John W. (Saint Louis, MO)

Liked Station Eleven then You'll Love This Book!
The Immortal King Rao is a very intriguing and well written story that is extremely appropriate for the time we are living where big tech dominates our lives in more ways than ever envisioned. It tells a story of a dystopian society of an Indian man who invents a computer and social order that treats every person in the world as a shareholder. Each person's actions raise or lowers your shares. Like any corporation there is a Board that oversees the new world order and an algorithm that decides the value or payment of your actions. Initially King Rao and his wife are busy creating new products but then King Raomore
Laurie S., Minneapolis, MN

King Rao: A Techno Odyssey
A searing satire of technology's effects on individuals and society. Consider it a 21st century odyssey on the magnitude of Ralph Ellison's "Invisible Man" combined with Hollywood's techno thriller Inception.

Vauhini Vara's "The Immortal King Rao" follows the story of King Rao and his daughter Athena. From 1950s India to the near future of Seattle, the story moves back and forth from castes, nations, to a new way of life controlled by technology's power brokers. The novel explores what happens if online information is curated and controlled, and what happens when technology is developed to connect users to thismore
Power Reviewer
Beverly J. (Hoover, AL)

Smart, Clear-eyed, Riveting!
A clear-eyed and endlessly thought-provoking entertaining read of the age-old debate of the role of technology as a tool for betterment, and opportunity.

The author displays her journalist skills as she effectively combines a matter-of-fact view with intimate details across a vast and diverse timeline from 1950s India of a rural Dalit community to the 1970s United States and the beginning of the rise the entrepreneurial technological behemoths to the futuristic corporate-run governments with algorithm driven solutions being the norm as climate change rages its revenge.

This was a smart, original, and completelymore
Daniel

The immortal king Rao
It is a touching story and a great one, you must have been practicing for months I recommend this book, one of the best. May God grant you more wisdom.
Molly B. (Longmont, CO)

What a Book!
This book packs in so much – a complex storyline, an apocryphal message and many familiar existential questions. What an interesting and really original story! There are some very heavy and essential comments about what humanity is doing with our time on this earth. There is commentary on many ugly parts of their society, which happens to look just like our current world: capitalism, the consumer value system, the demoralization of human beings that stems from being responsible only for self, the folly of doing everything BUT what is needed to stop global warming, sexism, racism. There is also a fascinatingmore
Susan B. (Memphis, MO)

not like other books, definitely worth a try
Very interesting book, and I've thought about it quite a bit since finishing, though I'm still not sure where I land on it overall. I found it quite well-written and very wide ranging in content, though the latter sometimes led to some disorientation for me. Part dystopian science fiction, part immigrant "success" story, part capitalism/corporatism/consumerism critique, part dive into Indian culture, part child-parent dynamic story, etc., some of these I enjoyed more than others. There were many earthy details that were sometimes fascinating and sometimes off-putting, but given the good writing, if any of thesemore
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