Inside Fuming Forests draws the reader deep into Bastar, where the silence of the sal trees hides more than just shadows. For Anjula, raised in England but bound to this land by blood, a year at her ancestral estate was meant to be a pause before university, a chance to breathe in her father’s legacy. What she finds instead is a world on edge—timber smugglers circling the forests, corporations eager to strip them bare, and insurgents who see the trees as both shield and battlefield, their hidden caches of arms turning the forest into an armoury. When a silent warning turns into a midnight escape, Anjula is forced to run, clutching little more than her knapsack and her faith in those she barely knows. Mahua, a tribal girl hardened by betrayal, and Sameer, a teacher with his own haunted past, become her companions through a landscape alive with both beauty and peril. Each step into the forest pulls her deeper into secrets of her family, her people, and herself. Tense, lyrical, and deeply human, Ira Saxena’s novel captures a land where power and greed clash with loyalty and belonging. Inside Fuming Forests is not just a story of survival, but of what it means to claim one’s place in a world determined to take it away.