God Man Syndrome is a contemporary political novel that explores the complex journey of power, ego, and the gradual erosion of democratic institutions. Through the story of a charismatic and widely popular prime minister, the narrative reveals how public support, media narratives, and sophisticated propaganda machinery together elevate a democratic leader above systems, laws, and accountability. The novel powerfully contrasts the glittering image of "televised India" with the harsh realities of "ground-level India" marked by unemployment, rural distress, and growing social inequality. Themes such as political hubris, legacy-building through grand monuments, emotional mass politics, the role of media, and the rise of civic resistance give the story a profoundly human and ethical dimension. God Man Syndrome serves both as a warning and a question: when citizens fall silent, and truth is drowned in noise, in which direction does democracy truly move?