Poetic Probes into Life
Book
Review
Title: Conversations with Coherent Worlds
Author: Anusha Sridharan
Publisher: Lapsus Creations,
2019
Poetry has long served as one of the most enduring
means through which human beings attempt to make sense of life. From its
earliest oral forms to its modern incarnations, it has offered a space to
register emotion, confront loss, articulate joy, and wrest meaning from
ordinary experience. Poets have turned to verse not merely to describe life as
it is lived, but to distil it: to hold fleeting moments still and examine them
with heightened attention.
Anusha Sridharan has made such an attempt
in her collection of poems titled Conversations with Coherent Worlds.
As the title indicates, this young poet’s world seems to be coherent enough not
to unsettle her thoughts and emotions beyond the usual limits. The blurb says
that our thought processes are constructed by “a tinge of logic and a bit of
consistency” though they may still go wrong occasionally. The wrongs are slight
and not many. Nevertheless they are there, and hence we need to pause every now
and then to look within. The blurb says that the poems in the volume are meant
to “make you more aware of yourself…”
The collection is divided into three
parts: My Conversations with the Inanimate, Themed Aspirations, and My
Abstractions. Since most poems have similar structures and
thought-processes as well as poetic expressions, let me explore one poem from
each section to bring a clear idea about the collection to the potential
reader.
1. Prayer’s Prominence
This poem frames prayer as a tool for restoration.
Life is presented as something that can “bog you down” with worries, but the
act of praying provides a “stronger will to succeed.” It suggests that faith
acts as a protective layer, allowing the individual to remain hopeful even when
circumstances are difficult.
Prayer helps both the individual who
prays and the external world. The poem suggests that while prayer starts as a
private, internal “magic,” its ultimate goal is “restored peace” for everyone.
Words like radiance, power,
and magic elevate prayer from a quiet whisper to a dynamic force. It is
described as something you “attain,” implying it is an active empowerment. A
line like “Limit not the boundless” carries profound philosophy in it. It
invites the reader to stop putting ceilings on what they believe is possible.
2. Journey Called Life
Another philosophical and celebratory reflection on human
experiences, this poem shifts the perspective of life from a destination to a continuous
process of evolution and connection.
Life is a multidimensional terrain
which offers us both the peaks (success, joy) and the valleys (struggle, pain).
The poet argues that life is a “mixture,” and its value comes from three
specific actions: the experience of living through the moments, the absorption
of lessons offered by these moments, and the passing on of that wisdom to
others.
The poem balances the three
dimensions of time. The past becomes a “culmination” (the foundation of who we
are now), the present is a “gift,” and the future is a “hope.” A pivotal moment
in the poem is the “desire to break open from the chains of illusions.” In
other words, a major part of our life’s journey is awakening from illusions
such as societal expectations, fears, and false beliefs.
There is a holistic view of existence
in the poem. It suggests that life isn’t something to be “solved,” but a journey
to be experienced with an open heart. By viewing everything as a “celebration,”
even the difficult terrains become part of a beautiful, woven tapestry.
3. Off the Cliff
Not everything in the journey called life is
enchanting. There are menacing cliffs too. This poem is a powerful exploration
of betrayal, the lasting impact of trauma, and the cyclical nature of
consequences. This is the last poem in the collection and perhaps the heaviest
in terms of psychological underpinnings.
The central metaphor is being pushed off
a cliff. However, the poet focuses less on the fall and more on the aftermath.
The victim is given the power to “climb again.” The betrayer becomes a “scar”
and a “nightmare,” living forever in the victim’s memory.
A line like “It’s not the height but
the depth” carries immense power. The “depth” refers to the emotional void left
behind when trust is “nullified.” The deeper the original trust was, the more “gravely
it hurts” when that trust is broken.
The poem concludes with a warning about
the inevitability of a circular justice system. You may not regret your actions
now, but “time shall then soon come” when you will occupy the victim’s position.
The betrayer will one day become the betrayed and then understanding will
descend. The cliff is waiting for them too.
Conclusion
I presented one poem from each section of the book instead
of looking at all the poems in general because this will help the potential
reader to get an idea of what to expect from a book like this. The collection is
poetry of everyday reflection, drawing on familiar emotional and moral
landscapes, and does succeed too in the aspiration.
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| One of the poems |
PS. I received a copy
of the book from the author herself as a prize for a blog hop activity #EveryConversationMatters led by Manali Manan Desai and Sukaina Majeed.


Hari Om
ReplyDeleteI like your approach to assaying one of each section - reads well, and encouraged me to go search. Excited to find it available for my Kindle! YAM xx
Sounds like an interesting collection.
ReplyDeleteSounds like a nice collection.
ReplyDeleteLooks interesting
ReplyDelete