Literary Club of R.B.V.R.R. Women's College. Aims to create a platform where young minds of the college exchange their literary and creative thoughts.
Saturday, 20 September 2025
Saturday, 13 September 2025
"The Forest Beyond Eight", a short story by Sharanya Jayachandran, from BSc (BTCFS) I year.
The Sharma’s had come to Udaipur for a wedding. Between the rituals and music, one plan stood out—buying jewellery from a small rural village, where women handcrafted ornaments.
The village lay beyond a thick forest. Locals whispered the same warning:
“Leave before eight. After that… the forest decides who leaves.”
The driver, Raghav, grew pale as the sun dipped. But the Sharma’s lingered. By the time they left, it was well past eight.
Inside the forest, the headlights began to stutter. The same trees loomed again and again, as though the bus circled endlessly.
Finally, Raghav stopped, whispering: “We wait till midnight. It’s the only way.”
One by one, the family drifted into uneasy sleep. But the kids were restless. Four of them—Aditya and Kabir, and their cousins Riya and Meera—whispered about exploring the forest with their drone and torch.
The twins, Aarav and Arjun, decided to stay back. “We’ll get caught. You go,” Aarav muttered, curling up against his brother.
So, while the bus slept, the other four quietly opened the emergency door and slipped into the forest with the torch, drone, and a notebook to trace their path. Half an hour later, Priya, Aditya’s mother, stirred awake. The seats were empty. Panic spread through the bus.
The twins confessed: “They went into the forest.”
The family erupted into chaos. Some demanded to search, but when they asked Raghav to lead them, he trembled.
“This place… eats people. I’ve seen it. I will not go in.”
At last, they tied a rope to the nearest tree, venturing into the forest with phone flashlights—only for the phones to flicker dead in their hands, as though drained by something unseen.
Back in the woods, the four children were already lost. The torch went out. The drone’s screen blurred with static. The forest grew impossibly silent, save for the crunch of their own footsteps.
In a clearing, they spotted an old white van. Its headlights were dim, almost glowing. Inside sat a man—motionless, eyes closed. His skin was pale, his beard long, his traditional outfit eerily spotless.
“Ask him for help,” Aditya whispered.
“No!” Riya hissed. “Something’s wrong with him.”
Before they could argue, the man’s eyes snapped open. He stepped out, his voice deep and hollow:
“Children… what are you doing here?”
Their story spilled out between trembling lips. The man listened with an expressionless face, then nodded.
“Come. I’ll take you to your family.”
Shivering, they climbed in. Aditya quickly scribbled the number plate: 9695.
The van moved soundlessly, tires making no noise on the dirt.
“Uncle… why do people fear this forest?” Kabir asked, trying to be brave.
The man’s gaze lingered on him too long before he answered:
“Because once, a family tried to leave. Their daughter died here. The mother’s screams filled these woods until she too stopped breathing. The father… could not live with himself. Since then, the forest likes to keep families… together.”
The air inside the van turned ice cold. None of the children spoke again.
Moments later, the van rolled to a stop. The bus was there. The family cried out, rushing to embrace the missing children.
The Sharma’s wept with relief, thanking the man over and over. He simply said, “Follow my van. I’ll guide you out.”
The bus followed. The van’s dim red taillights cut through the black forest until suddenly—bright highway lamps appeared.
But when they looked again, the van was gone.
Still, the family reached their hotel alive. In daylight, it all felt like a nightmare. At breakfast, the children huddled around Aditya’s laptop, loading the drone footage.
The forest flickered on screen. Then—the van.
“Zoom in,” Meera whispered.
The number plate: 9695.
Aditya’s notebook slipped open. The same number.
But the van looked different. Not clean. Not intact.
Rust covered its sides. Windows shattered. Paint peeling. The grill bent as if from an old crash.
And yet—the same number plate.
The children froze. The footage continued. When the man stepped out, his body cast no shadow. The van moved on its own, headlights glowing like hollow eyes.
The final frame made their blood run cold.
The drone, before cutting to static, had caught the van again. Not in the forest.
Parked.
Rusted.
Broken.
Right outside their hotel.
A faint horn honked below.
The notebook slipped from Aditya’s trembling hands.
9695.
Tuesday, 9 September 2025
Author Feature:
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Ravinder Singh |
- his career, bibliography, and personal life.
- Provides details of his published books and achievements.
Saturday, 6 September 2025
A Gentle Reminder: Your Dreams Matter.
Dr. B R Ambedkar faced extreme hardships in his life. Denied basic rights, education, and respect, he still rose to become the Father of the Indian Constitution. His life teaches us that circumstances do not define one’s destiny.
Success is not about the advantages or privileges one has. Reservation, wealth, or freedom from discrimination may make life easier, but they cannot replace determination, focus, and mental strength. Even those with every opportunity can face challenges if they lack clear goals and sincere preparation.
It is important to remember history. For generations, many communities were denied dignity and access to basic rights from drawing water from wells to entering temples and educational spaces. These injustices affected countless lives and left deep scars. While society has come a long way, it is essential that we never forget these wrongs and remain committed to creating a fair and inclusive environment for everyone.
Every person faces obstacles, bias, or setbacks in their journey. The difference between those who succeed and those who struggle is not their background but their will to rise above challenges.
Ambedkar’s journey reminds us that external conditions are secondary to inner strength. All you need are clear aims, self belief, and sincere preparation. With these, no obstacle is too great and no dream is too distant.
This article is not meant to discourage or differentiate anyone. It is a message to the youth that neither reservation nor discrimination should stop you from pursuing your dreams. It is also a reminder to society to never forget the injustices of the past and to work together for a more compassionate and supportive future.
Your dreams matter believe in yourself, keep moving forward, and let determination guide your path.
An Article by Udhari Arundhati, B.A. II Year.
Saturday, 30 August 2025
Your feelings!
A poem by M. Lakshmi Prasanna from B.com , I YEAR.
Saturday, 23 August 2025
"BAN PLASTIC", an essay by Meenakshi Rathod B.A. HEP II YEAR.
- Milk is delivered in glass bottles
- Groceries are carried in jute bags
- Parties use steel cutlery, not plastic waste
- Packaging is made of leaves, not poison
- Refusing plastic in our daily lives
- Educating people
- Participating in clean-up drives and campaigns
- Using social media to raise awareness
- Supporting strict government policies
- Promoting alternatives
Tuesday, 19 August 2025
Author Feature:
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Perumal Murugan |
About the Author:
Books Translated into English.
Sunday, 17 August 2025
"BAN PLASTIC", an essay by TWINKLE KONDEPOGU. B.A. MLHJ, III YEAR.
Tuesday, 29 July 2025
Author Feature:
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Shashi Tharoor: A Renowned Politician, Diplomat, and Author |
His famous book :
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An Era of Darkness |
Sunday, 27 July 2025
"BAN PLASTIC",Essay by Nethikar Mounika. B.Sc - FSCCa, 3rd Year.
On June 5, 2025, as India celebrated World Environment Day with the theme “One Nation, One Mission: End Plastic Pollution.” I remember Prime Minister Modiji's words hitting me hard. “Every plastic bottle we toss away is like a scar on our planet's heart.” It felt so real, especially after seeing clips of a massive cleanup drive along the Ganges. Leaders, students and even kids were out there pulling out plastic bags, bottles from the river. It was messy, emotional and made me rethink - how did we let our sacred rivers, whom we worship get so choked with trash? That day I felt some contribution of any sort must be done from our side.
Plastic Pollution isn’t just about dirty rivers, though. It’s everywhere. An article from Hindu, not so long ago mentioned India throws about 5.8 million tonnes of plastic every year, and the smoke from that messes up the air, it is scary to think about breathing in those toxins, but we actually do. Many Indian Cities like New Delhi, Noida, Durgapur, Patna, ect. often appear in top 10 of World AQI (Air Quality Index) rankings. Microplastics being the major component of the pollution.
In landfills, there are piles of plastic bags and wrappers that don’t break down, leaking chemicals into the ground, from where we grow our food. From a year the major hot topic has been microplastics - they are everywhere in water, food, air even in our bodies causing major health problems.
But there are people fighting back, which gives hope. Like Matti Malhar Kambe, a young man from Mumbai - who recently received the National Creators Award 2024 has been doing incredible work with his group “Beach Please”. They clean up Beaches, make for funny videos to get people’s attention and promote things like Bamboo straws, cloth bags so on. Malhar’s mantra - Refuse, reuse, rethink has become a rally cry. He has become an inspiration for GenZs.
The World is starting to wake up too. Back in 2022 United Nations Environment Assembly in Nairobi, 175 countries got together and promised pledged to make a treaty to stop plastic pollution by 2040, by cutting down on making new plastic recycling more and get rid of single use stuff. Still it is not easy, India banned single use plastics in 2022, which was effective for certain time but no proper implementation and no proper alternative like plastic introduced plastic same back. Globally only 9% of plastic gets recycled.
The rest just sits in landfills or gets dumped in places like India from rich countries. The Global Waste Trade is reality, this unfair treatment, must stop. But I believe we can change things. Cities like Indore is doing amazing work with community cleanups, making it the cleanest city each time. As Amit Ray, an Indian author said “A plastic pollution-free world is not a choice but a commitment to life”, Let’s honour the commitment for our rivers, our soil, our air and our next generation.
Tuesday, 22 July 2025
Author Feature: Rochelle Potkar
Author Feature
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Rochelle Potkar Writer, Poet, Playwright |
About the Author:
About the book:
The D’Costa Family
Tuesday, 15 July 2025
Author Feature:
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Anusha Subramanian |
About the author:
Tuesday, 8 July 2025
Author feature:
About the Author:
Tuesday, 1 July 2025
Author Feature:
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Nikita singh |
About the author:
Saturday, 28 June 2025
Poem by B Gauravi Goud
"A Drop on the leaf"-
by B.Gouravi Goud from Bsc. Zcfs II nd year
Tuesday, 24 June 2025
Author Feature
Author Feature :
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Chetan Bhagat |
About the author :
Sunday, 15 June 2025
Poem by Arundhathi Udhari
"FOREVER MY FIRST HOME : DADDY" - By Udhari Arundhati of B.A HEP second year.
Tuesday, 10 June 2025
Author Feature:

Bhavik Sarkhedi

About the author:
Bhavik started writing at an early age and eventually turned his passion for words into a full-time profession. His storytelling is deeply rooted in real-life experiences, offering a unique mix of inspiration, emotional depth, and relatability. The Weak Point Dealer especially reflects his belief in human resilience, as it narrates tales of individuals dealing with hidden weaknesses and emerging stronger.
Apart from being a published author, Bhavik is the founder of multiple successful content agencies including Write Right, Estorytellers, Taletel, KalamKagaz, Dad of Ad, and Blushush. He has built a reputation for delivering high-quality content services globally and has catered to over 1500 clients across 25+ countries.
Over the years, Bhavik has authored seven books across genres like fiction, romance, and marketing. Some of his other works include Will You Walk a Mile?, The Unproposed Guy, and The C to T of Content Marketing. Through his writing, Bhavik continues to bridge the gap between literature and digital relevance.
He is also known for mentoring aspiring writers and freelancers, offering them guidance in building careers in writing, personal branding, and marketing. Bhavik regularly publishes blogs, gives interviews, and shares insights on content trends, SEO, and entrepreneurship.
Tuesday, 8 April 2025
Author Feature :
About the Author :
Tuesday, 25 March 2025
Author Feature :
About the book : "Chanakya Niti".
Tuesday, 18 March 2025
Author Feature:
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Gaur Gopal Das |
ABOUT THE BOOK : " Energize Your Mind".
- Improves focus and mental clarity
- Teaches techniques for emotional self-control
- Encourages self-awareness and mindfulness
- Provides tools to build healthier relationships
- Enhances overall well-being and inner peace
Tuesday, 11 March 2025
Author Feature:
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Rashmi Bansal |
Rashmi Bansal is an Indian writer, entrepreneur, and motivational speaker. She is known for her books on entrepreneurship, inspiring many aspiring business leaders.
She has written 10 bestselling books, which have sold over 2 million copies worldwide. Her work has been translated into 12 languages, including Korean and Vietnamese. She is also recognized as India's first business book author.
Her first book, Stay Hungry Stay Foolish, became a runaway bestseller. It tells the stories of 25 IIM graduates who built successful businesses.
Some of her other popular books include Connect the Dots, I Have a Dream, God’s Own Kitchen, and Touch the Sky.
ABOUT THE BOOK : "Stay Hungry Stay strong".
