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Quest of the Sparrows Paperback – January 1, 2014
Purchase options and add-ons
- Print length274 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherRupa Publications India Pvt Ltd.
- Publication dateJanuary 1, 2014
- Dimensions7.8 x 5.08 x 0.83 inches
- ISBN-109788129118653
- ISBN-13978-8129118653
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From the Publisher

Conversation with Kartik Sharma
Prologue
He knew he was dying.
Through his failing vision, he saw the trophies he’d been so proud of, adorning the walls of his room. Now, in his last moments, he felt their worthlessness. The desire he had long suppressed of becoming an artist, a painter, confronted him.
Long ago, the plight of his struggling artist friends and the complete insecurity of his future had made him lose his nerve. He fled the art scene and took up a comfortable desk job.
But the ghost of the artist never left him in peace, despite his affluence. It held him responsible for its murder. How would life have turned out if he had remained steadfast to his first love?
‘Better! Would have absolved my existence. Changed me into a greater human being. All my life’s work amounts to nothing!’
Tears of regret spilled from his eyes.

From the bed, he saw the sparrow he fed everyday land on the windowsill. Ironically, the sparrow never worried about tomorrow, but lived every day joyously. Unlike him; he had spent all his life securing his tomorrows. Now, all of a sudden, there was no tomorrow.
‘If I get another chance …’ he murmured, before he died with the wish on his lips.
A Method behind the Madness
Beep … beep … beep … beep …. The oscilloscope sent out its tired signals, the waves losing their highs as they ran out of energy.
Had she been conscious, she would have brought her hands to her ears and screamed; the shrill tone would have driven her crazy. But she was beyond caring, edging past the twilight zone between darkness and light. She had suffered enough. For her sake, he wanted her to cross the thin line between life and death.
Beep …

The sound died. The wave flattened into a straight line. With it, the three-month-old battle ended. She became another statistical figure, another coma victim.
It was drizzling when the ambulance arrived and the ward boys heaved the body into the back with a practised ease that was almost obscene. Their indifference stripped death of its dignity and reduced it to a routine, mechanical procedure. As he tried to climb into the ambulance, he felt a hand on his left shoulder.
He turned and his mouth went dry.
Three men had him cornered. Their plastic hats and raincoats looked ominous. The hand dug deeper into the flesh of his shoulder and he cried out in pain.
‘Where’s the money?’
‘I couldn’t get it today … .’ His face went pale.
Am I bleeding?
‘You didn’t learn any new sentences in the weeks we gave you.’
‘I … I will pay. Promise.’
Editorial Reviews
Review
"Ranked 22 among the 'Best South Asian Fiction' at Goodreads: goodreads.com/list/show/48.Best_South_Asian_Fiction" -Goodreads
A Bestseller in Spiritual Fiction Category at Amazon India!
THE HINDU: The Quest of the Sparrows is about a small bird and big life lessons from a spiritual journey that takes off from the simple premise of living for today. This fast paced, action packed and simply written work of fiction inspires one to live each day joyously without worrying much about what the future holds.
Book Description
From the Author
About the Author
Ravi 'Nirmal' Sharma am an Associate Creative Director (Copy & Concepts) with a reputed agency. He believes each one of us is born with a unique talent, which if actuated contributes to evolution. Life has to be more than a mere journey from birth to death. Not once, but many times, people and circumstances remind us of the inner calling we ignore. Listening to these voices can enrich our life and those of others in touch with us.
Product details
- ASIN : 8129118653
- Publisher : Rupa Publications India Pvt Ltd.
- Publication date : January 1, 2014
- Language : English
- Print length : 274 pages
- ISBN-10 : 9788129118653
- ISBN-13 : 978-8129118653
- Item Weight : 7 ounces
- Dimensions : 7.8 x 5.08 x 0.83 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #3,312,687 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #49,160 in Literary Fiction (Books)
- #298,188 in Religion & Spirituality (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the authors
Kartik Sharma is the author of The Quest of the Sparrows (2011) and DareDreamers: A Start-up of Superheroes (2018). An alumnus of Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi and Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad, he lives in Switzerland. He is currently working on a collection of science fiction short stories and a speculative fantasy series.
I am an Associate Creative Director (Copy & Concepts) with a reputed agency. I believe each one of us is born with a unique talent, which if actuated contributes to evolution. Life has to be more than a mere journey from birth to death. Not once, but many times, people and circumstances remind us of the inner calling we ignore. Listening to these voices can enrich our life and those of others in touch with us.
I gave up a lucrative government career because I couldn't 'adjust' to the corruption and I am glad I quit, even though it was supposedly a foolish thing to do at the time. The move went on to reaffirm my faith that survival was no big deal. Evolution is.
The rest is this story, written by me and my son. Hope you will enjoy it along with your evolution. Really, it is never too late to evolve. Years and years of living, and just a few at excelling. That is how the dice is loaded completely in your favur. So choose to play and evolve. Not stay and stagnate.
Happy evolution!
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book's storyline engaging, with one mentioning how the thoughtfully woven plot keeps readers turning pages. They appreciate its readability, with one customer noting it's a great read for slowing down.
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Customers enjoy the storyline of the book, with one mentioning how the thoughtfully woven plot keeps readers engaged, while another notes how it provides answers about the inner spirit.
"...The thoughtfully woven plot line keeps pages turning, which is necessary for a story that inevitably pushes the reader toward self-reflection...." Read more
"I learned so much from this book. It's a wonderful parable, that describes a journey in "practical spiritualism" and provides answers to questions..." Read more
"Saying it's a pretty good book is an understatement. The story lingers with you for years." Read more
"Nice Story Line..But missing something..." Read more
Customers find the book readable, with one mentioning it's a great read to slow things down.
"This is a great read to slow things down if you find you've been too caught up in the fast pace of life...." Read more
"Excellent. I thoroughly enjoyed it." Read more
"Saying it's a pretty good book is an understatement. The story lingers with you for years." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on June 3, 2016This is a great read to slow things down if you find you've been too caught up in the fast pace of life. The thoughtfully woven plot line keeps pages turning, which is necessary for a story that inevitably pushes the reader toward self-reflection. There are clear influences of Hesse (Siddartha) and Coelho (The Alchemist) here, so fans of those books are very likely to enjoy this novel. I enjoyed the inclusion of multiple perspectives and reactions in this story, which creates a more modern picture of the complexities of spiritualism today.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 14, 2018The story was humorous and I liked it , It says that one should connect to divine but it never says how to do that.
Second thing which is missing is connected to divine is okay but for that a person has to be thoughtless, In that thoughtlessness you are automatically connected to divine. When a hero of the story pratibhan knew that somebody about to shoot him, why he didn't protected him, as if he was already connected to divine which always gives spontaneous action. Also there is no reason to run ashram when you are divinely connected, a common man becomes his or her own GURU when he is connected to divine, so there is no need to get in touch with so called GURUS and Ashrams. Please start doing sahaja yoga where you will become your own guru, it is free.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 6, 2015Excellent. I thoroughly enjoyed it.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 30, 2014NOTE: This review is up @ www.readmuse.blogspot.in
Spiritual or Advance thinking books aren't really my forte. Sadly I am not blessed with such an intellect to understand or should I say I am blessed with a temperament to steer clear of such books?
The Book cover and the summary intrigued me. What harm in giving such a book a chance? I entered the giveaway and won it too!
The book is exactly what it claims to be. The writers have attempted to convey what we have conveniently chosen to forget. The book is about discovering yourself, the real you and not the person that we have become due to various reasons.
Thankfully the writers have managed to induce that suspense element; else I would have chucked the book for it contains a lot of explosive truths which would make you realize what kind of monster you are.
For an Atheist, the book might look like a feeble attempt to make him believe the existence of a higher being called god. Thankfully I am not an Atheist.
The narration was pretty good. The incidents described on Journey on Foot seemed more or less realistic. The writers managed to keep me hooked to the book unlike my previous trysts with Spiritual sort of books. The climax was really the biggest twist. I never saw that coming! But when "that" happened I kind felt sad (Read the book to know what "that" is! No Spoilers!).The writers thus successfully managed to convey emotions properly!
The one thing that could have been is the explanation of how both the Gurus cure cancer/Tumour. That sort of sounds farfetched but is not unheard of (Read up on Holy Saint Sankaracharya)
Overall, I felt like reading a culmination of discourses by various spiritual gurus like Sri Sri Ravishankar ,Osho and my own grandfather! The writer's originality is restricted to the "story" line.
VERDICT: Pick it up only if you can handle some serious thought processing
- Reviewed in the United States on July 16, 2019I learned so much from this book. It's a wonderful parable, that describes a journey in "practical spiritualism" and provides answers to questions about the inner spirit each of us has.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 16, 2015Saying it's a pretty good book is an understatement. The story lingers with you for years.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 8, 2015Love it.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 21, 2015A spiritual fable, search for enlightenment, what is genuine and what is fake. A tale of redemption and salvation in the modern times. Full of hope and uplifting. The central character is a middle aged man with mid life crises, who questions the meaning of life and even if its worth living. A desperate cry from a desperate man who takes his chances with a new Guru with set things in order.
Top reviews from other countries
- Vishnu ChevliReviewed in India on July 13, 2017
5.0 out of 5 stars ... the Sparrows just after The Evolution of God is like a deadly cocktail of vodka and whiskey
Reading The Quest of the Sparrows just after The Evolution of God is like a deadly cocktail of vodka and whiskey. Both are two extreme of one rope. Both books reminded me the famous quote: "Once the God and man met. Their thought 'My Creator'" I liked The Evolution of God and I loved The Quest of the Sparrows. This year has given me another gem in my spiritual book collection. The Quest of the Sparrows is added to my list of "Repeat once in a year"
The book contains only one story but it is portrayed from three character's point of view. The main protagonist of the story is Swami Partibhan. His ascend to his father Guru Parmanand Swami's position is the core of the story. Two more important characters are Nikhil and Sanjeev. Both came to Ashram in Manmar with few goals in mind. After joining ashram as Guru, Partibhan had taken completely new approach. He believed in practical spirituality. He challenged his followers to take a tremendous task of Manmar to Ganpatiphule by walk without money and gadgets. Very few people joined him on this quest and less than 15 finished at the end. Nikhil and Sanjeev's perspective towards spirituality changed completely after the journey. Throughout their journey, they saw various life-changing examples of humility and spirituality. I don't want to reveal characters traits as it might spoil readers experience.
The best part of the story is flow. I kept reading the book in spite of being a busy weekend. I liked the way characters were evolved during their journey. I usually don't like spiritual lectures but the way it was mixed with the storyline, I didn't even feel that it was coming. The author has given emphasis on keeping only positive things in mind. Though one can have multiple negative experiences in wild, the story was kept with at most positiveness.
In today's world it is possible to find religious people but finding spiritual people is a difficult task. The book is written on a similar theme. Not just theoretical spirituality but practical spirituality was preached by characters of the story. The example of sparrow used is eye catching observation. We are always busy in achieving our next goal. What we achieved previously usually become regular and we start taking it for granted. The concept of going somewhere without planning and without money or resources looks scary, but I am thinking of doing it at least once in a life-time. It Let God or supreme power decide the course of action.
Things I liked in book or story:
- Concept of journey - It feels like we are reading a trekking or adventure book
- Reasoning of Parthibhan for various situations
- Overall positiveness (This may be negative for few readers but I liked it)
- Relevance used with Sparrow
I am recommending this book to all genre people.
- Kindle CustomerReviewed in the United Kingdom on August 14, 2017
5.0 out of 5 stars Good book
This is very light book as in no drama no masala but with some nice message of how to do things in a better way, how to serve people in a good manner, tells about human behaviour as well. Must read book.
-
ClientReviewed in France on October 25, 2020
3.0 out of 5 stars Moyen
Convaincu par les commentaires, je me suis finalement plutôt ennuyé dans cette lecture. Je n'ai d'ailleurs toujours pas fini ce livre
- M.S.DeviReviewed in the United Kingdom on September 24, 2013
5.0 out of 5 stars A good read!
At first I thought, anyone with some spiritual background in an ashram, could have written this; then it changed, with an unique approach and thinking parallel to the material world we belong. Wanted to know what happens next...had to finish it as soon as possible. Would appeal to the spiritual seeker or to someone who would enjoy a good read.
- Krishna Singh AdhikariReviewed in India on May 22, 2025
4.0 out of 5 stars Nice one
A must-read novel to see the internal strength.