
Amirisetti Gopal (AmiGo) is a storyteller at heart, weaving history, cinema, cricket, culture, Indian mythology, and philosophical inquiry into powerful narratives that explore nationhood—how a land remembers itself, how power forgets its duty, and how stories preserve what official history abandons. A Pune MBA by education and a creative professional by passion, AmiGo hails from Nuziveedu, a historic town in Andhra Pradesh famed for its legendary mangoes and ancient forts, where the sweetness of abundance coexists with the scars of forgotten strongholds. This contrast shaped his imagination early: flavour beside fortification, memory beside silence. He began his career founding EVOLUTION, directing corporate films for multinational companies and thought-provoking documentaries on social issues like child labour, child marriage, and HIV awareness.
Drawn by a lifelong love for cinema, he honed “ahead-of-its-time” narratives that fuelled his resolve despite the setbacks. The lockdown ignited his transition to books and fiction. His debut, Beretta 606824 – The Gun That Killed Mahatma Gandhi, traces the fictional 14-year journey of the assassin’s gun across 13 countries and 12 hands, earning wide acclaim. He followed with the espionage thriller Cowboy 51 – and his gutsy escape to glory, featuring a cricketer-spy on a nuclear mission in Pakistan; Chepauk – a story of love, guns and cricket, a romantic tale amid a vibrant stadium; and the psychological mystery AlgoRhythm – Math, Music, Murder, set in Haridwar.
Honoured with the International Author Excellence Award, his works blend lost histories, cinematic flair, and moral depth. Gopal’s most ambitious vision is Akhand Jwala, a ten-book saga—a modern Indian legend written for readers who see stories as preparations for civilisations.
It leads into Akhand Vayu, Akhand Apas, and Akhand Vyomi—each a ten-book epic—converging into Akhand Bharat, celebrating Bharat’s courage, culture, cuisine, compassion, and cosmos, declaring that kings are crowned by conscience, not conquest. His books have drawn filmmakers’ attention, fulfilling his cinematic destiny. AmiGo dedicates his journey to his late father, whose dreams shaped his own, and draws daily inspiration from his sons, Pritham and Vihaan. When not writing, he dismantles myths and rebuilds timelines. For him, storytelling isn’t a profession—it’s a way of life.

Aurora Colony, Road #3, Banjara Hills, Hyderabad – 34, INDIA.
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