Books

Public Life OfA Private Eye

Detective fiction as a genre barely exists in Indo-Anglian writing. Sharmila Kantha attempts to break the jinx.

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Public Life OfA Private Eye
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The Mandala of Sherlock Holmes

She tells the story of the young Ramji, who works in a bank and sets up shop as a private eye in his off-time. The son of a second-rung civil servant, he is in love with Mandy Kaur, his co-passenger in a chartered bus. Mrs Mehrotra, a wealthy widow of a retired bureaucrat, has been murdered. Her niece-in-law, Mrs Kumar, is Ramji’s first client. Murderer-shurderer be damned, she just wants our hero to find the will. What follows is an eventful and amusing read.

Kantha effortlessly conjures up the colliding worlds of babudom and business, and dwells fondly on all the unlovely emblems of Delhi. Ramji handles the inevitable break-up with his sweetheart with aplomb; like the city he lives in, he too is versed in the lessons of survival. Hopefully, he will live to tell another tale.

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