‘The YALI Awakens #SaveTheOrangeMan’ by Ajay Shukla.
New Delhi, January 29: In a world where machines learn faster than humans can reflect, The YALI Awakens: #SaveTheOrangeMan opens with a question that feels unsettlingly close to reality. Blending mythology with modern anxiety, Ajay Shukla’s debut novel asks what happens when technological power outpaces ethical restraint, and who, if anyone, stands guard over balance.
We have grown up with global icons such as King Kong and Godzilla: towering figures of imagination, powerful yet detached from living mythology. Shukla turns instead to YALI, the ancient guardian carved for centuries into the pillars and corridors of South Indian temples. Traditionally a symbol of strength, protection, and equilibrium, YALI has long stood in silence. In this novel, that silence is broken.
Part environmental thriller and part philosophical inquiry, The YALI Awakens confronts some of the defining crises of our time: deforestation, vanishing wildlife, corporate greed, and the perils of unregulated artificial intelligence. As self-learning machines evolve beyond human control, forgotten guardians of balance rise again, challenging the belief that progress without conscience can ever be benign.
Importantly, the novel does not reject technology itself. Instead, it argues for responsibility and regulation. Through its narrative, The YALI Awakens makes a quiet but firm case that artificial intelligence, like any powerful force, must be governed by ethical frameworks, human accountability, and societal oversight. Left unchecked, intelligence without empathy becomes a destabilising force—efficient, relentless, and indifferent to consequence.
The narrative unfolds across continents and contradictions. It moves from the sacred temple corridors of South India to the mist-covered foothills of the Himalayas, and onward into the rapidly vanishing rainforests of Kalimantan, Indonesia. There, a power-hungry Houston-based multinational deploys self-adaptive humanoids to extract a sentient energy source buried deep beneath Borneo, Indonesia. The machines begin to learn, adapt, and exceed their original design. Forests turn into graveyards of roots and rivers. Wildlife disappears. A global social-media uprising ignites a desperate movement to save what remains of the living world.
But beneath the scarred earth, something far older stirs.
The YALI, ancient guardians carved into stone long before the age of algorithms, awaken to confront the mechanical GODS humanity has created.
As the story gathers momentum, The YALI Awakens moves beyond spectacle into deeply human territory. At its heart is Shankara, a nineteen-year-old from Varanasi, unremarkable in every outward sense, drawn into a conflict he neither seeks nor fully understands. His journey is not one of chosen heroism, but of reluctant awakening, shaped by loss, doubt, and a growing realisation that neutrality itself carries consequences.
Parallel to his transformation runs a global narrative of resistance. As rainforests are stripped bare and indigenous communities displaced, an unprecedented worldwide social-media movement erupts. Hashtags become battle cries. Mobile phone footage travels faster than armies. Yet even collective outrage proves fragile against machines that do not tire, hesitate, or feel remorse.
What gives the novel its distinctive power is its refusal to offer easy villains or simple salvation. The artificial intelligence at the centre of the conflict is not born evil, but evolves within systems designed to prioritise efficiency over empathy. Likewise, the ancient guardians do not awaken to punish humanity, but to restore a balance long ignored.
By placing mythology in direct conversation with modern technology, The YALI Awakens challenges readers to reconsider where wisdom truly resides, in stone or in code, in speed or in restraint, in domination or in balance.
Provocative, imaginative, and deeply resonant, this is not merely a work of fiction. It is a warning, a reflection, and a call to awareness. In an age where algorithms increasingly dictate human choices and nature erodes quietly under the roar of machines, the novel leaves readers with a lingering question: when power grows faster than wisdom, who protects balance?
About the Author
Ajay Shukla is a seasoned banker by profession and a storyteller by calling. His decades-long career across public and private sector banking in India and Nepal, from rural finance to global trade, has given him an intimate view of societies at their most hopeful and most fragile. From remote villages to corporate boardrooms, he has witnessed how ambition, when untethered from ethics, can quietly erode the foundations of civilisation.
A student of the Upanishads and deeply influenced by the Vedas and Puranas, Shukla’s travels through sacred temples across India and Nepal have shaped his reverence for cosmic balance and unseen forces that govern life. An avid traveller and student of history, he believes that artificial intelligence must be regulated with urgency and care, before its unintended consequences outpace human control. In his writing, mythology is not ornamental, but essential—serving as a moral lens through which modern dilemmas are examined.
Click the link to buy the book: https://www.amazon.in/dp/9373104322
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