<B>In this in-depth, engaging guide to the <I>Mahabharata</I>, Hindu Studies scholar Nicholas Sutton explores the central messages of the work’s core narratives and passages of instruction, demonstrating how the questions the text poses are as relevant today as they were to those who composed this mighty treatise on human existence.</B><BR><BR>The <i>Mahabharata</i> is a truly vast work of early Sanskrit literature that reflects on a wide range of issues which have concerned people throughout different epochs. Within the context of Indian culture, the significance of the <i>Mahabharata</i> cannot be overstated, as its themes, characters, narratives, and preoccupations have reverberated across the region for centuries.<BR><BR> It is well-known that the whole of the epic is structured around a central narrative that tells of an ancient conflict between two branches of the same royal house, the Pandavas and Kauravas<i>.</i> Yet it is also a clearly didactic work that addresses the f