An indispensable guide to poetic making. Dandin's Kavyadarsa, Parichcheda, edited by S.K. Belvalkar, is a foundational Sanskrit poetic treatise from the classical Sanskrit era that lays out the grammar of taste and the craft of expression. Form, feeling, and craft converge. Precise yet suggestive, the work offers concise prescriptions for ornament, metre and stylistic effect while modelling the kind of close reading modern readers prize; it functions as a handbook of poetics and aesthetics and reads at times like a literary criticism anthology. Its economical style instructs in the mechanics of diction, imagery and cadence, and it supplies a taxonomy of devices that continues to inform commentary and creative practice. Whether approached by a reader curious about imagery or by a practised student of rhetoric, the text rewards attention as an ancient rhetoric study and as a source for ongoing dandin literary analysis. Composed in early medieval India, the treatise is historically significant for codifying categories that became central to Sanskrit literary theory and for shaping the wider corpus of classical Indian literature. Republished by Alpha Editions in a careful modern edition, this volume preserves the spirit of the original while making it effortless to enjoy today - a heritage title prepared for readers and collectors alike. Accessible enough for casual readers to savour the pleasures of language, yet rigorous enough to serve as an academic reference book, the edition sits comfortably as both a readable introduction and a scholarly resource. Collectors of classic literature will appreciate its cultural weight; scholars and students gain a dependable companion for coursework, comparative study and research in the indian poetics collection. Its accessible presentation and contextual framing make it a natural inclusion on course reading lists and in private libraries; translators and poets will discover a practical source for creative experiment as well as for commentary. Above all, the volume reconnects readers with the lived craft of verse in early India, and in doing so it honours the enduring discipline of Sanskrit literary theory.