Vishappu Pranayamum Madamum by Muhammed Abbas is a raw, unfiltered journey into the depths of a man’s lived experiences. This autobiographical work stands out for its brutal honesty and emotional intensity. Abbas, through his sharp and vivid language, invites the reader to walk alongside him—as a painter smelling of turpentine, a rubber tapper drenched in sweat, a migrant worker in the Gulf haunted by alienation, a writer who fights with words and inner demons, and at times, a madman admitted to mental hospitals. What makes this book special is not just the variety of roles he’s played in life, but the depth of human experience each one carries. His narrative does not seek pity or admiration, but understanding and presence.
The most powerful aspect of the book is how Abbas writes about others as intensely as he writes about himself. He holds nothing back—each story, each person, is painted with a palette of truth, emotion, and often pain. There are moments in the book that make you stop, think, and feel deeply. His accounts of suicidal thoughts and mental illness are hauntingly real, yet written with a strange kind of poetic resilience. The hunger, love, and madness that form the triad of this book’s title are not separate chapters of his life but overlapping emotions that pulse through every page. This is not just a memoir; it’s a cry, a confession, and above all, a deeply human story.