At the shores of Mansarovar - the high Himalayan lake that sits at the threshold between the world and what lies beyond it - the Always-Aware Absolute enters the silence and creates two aspects of itself: Madhav and Radha. He is the witness, already whole. She is the question that refuses to disappear.
What follows is not a teaching. It is the Absolute in conversation with itself - examining its remaining illusions, one by one, until each dissolves in the light of its own seeing.
Eighteen chapters. Eighteen veils. When the last one lifts, Madhav turns - not toward the lake, not toward the tree - but toward the world. Toward the permanent union this entire dialogue was preparing him for.
This is not a love story. Or it is the only love story ever told.
Radha Madhav: A Dialogue of Brahman is a philosophical narrative in the tradition of the great dialogic Upanishads - but felt before it is understood. For readers who have sensed that the deepest truths arrive not as arguments but as recognitions.