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Sacred Games: A Novel (P.S.)
 

Sacred Games: A Novel (P.S.)
written by Vikram Chandra
Studio : Harper Perennial
by Harper Perennial
Release Date : 2007-12-18
Publisher : Harper Perennial
Released : 2007-12-01
Availability : Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Number of Items : 1
EAN : 9780061130366
Avg. Customer Rating:(based on 60 reviews)

List Price : $16.95
Our Price : $0.05


Editorial Reviews for  'Sacred Games: A Novel (P.S.)'
 
Product Description

A policeman, a criminal overlord, a Bollywood film star, beggars, cultists, spies, and terrorists—the lives of the privileged, the famous, the wretched, and the bloodthirsty interweave with cataclysmic consequences amid the chaos of modern-day Mumbai, in this soaring, uncompromising, and unforgettable epic masterwork of literary art.

 
Jas-store.com Review
Sacred Games is a novel as big, ambitious, multi-layered, contradictory, funny, sad, scary, violent, tender, complex, and irresistible as India itself. Steep yourself in this story, enjoy the delicious masala Chandra has created, and you will have an idea of how the country manages to hang together despite age-old hatreds, hundreds of dialects, different religious practices, the caste system, and corruption everywhere. The Game keeps it afloat.

There are more than a half-dozen subplots to be enjoyed, but the main events take place between Inspector Sartaj Singh, a Sikh member of the Mumbai police force, and Ganesh Gaitonde, the most wanted gangster in India. It is no accident that Ganesh is named for the Hindu god of success, the elephant god much revered by Hindus everywhere. By the world's standards he has made a huge success of his life: he has everything he wants. But soon after the novel begins he is holed up in a bomb shelter from which there is no escape, and Sartaj is right outside the door. Ganesh and Sartaj trade barbs, discuss the meaning of good and evil, hold desultory conversations alternating with heated exchanges, and, finally, Singh bulldozes the building to the ground. He finds Ganesh dead of a gunshot wound, and an unknown woman dead in the bunker along with him.

How did it come to this? Of course, Singh has wanted to capture this prize for years, but why now and why in this way? The chapters that follow tell both their stories, but especially chronicle Gaitonde's rise to power. He is a clever devil, to be sure, and his tales are as captivating as those of Scheherezade. Like her he spins them out one by one and often saves part of the story for the reader--or Sartaj--to figure out. He is involved in every racket in India, corrupt to the core, but even he is afraid of Swami Shridlar Shukla, his Hindu guru and adviser. In the story Gaitonde shares with Singh and countless other characters, Vikram Chandra has written a fabulous tale of treachery, a thriller, and a tour of the mean streets of India, complete with street slang. --Valerie Ryan

Questions for Vikram Chandra

After writing his first two, critically acclaimed books, Red Earth and Pouring Rain and Love and Longing in Bombay, Vikram Chandra set off on what became, seven years later, an epic story of crime and punishment in modern Mumbai, Sacred Games. Chandra splits his time between Berkeley, where he teaches at the University of California, and Mumbai, the vast city that becomes a character in its own right in Sacred Games. We asked him a few questions about his new book.

Jas-store.com: Did you imagine your book would become such an epic when you began it?

Vikram Chandra: No, not at all. When I began, I imagined a conventional crime story which began with a dead body or two, proceeded along a linear path, and ended 300 pages later with a neatly-wrapped solution. But when I began to actually investigate the particular kind of crime that I was interested in, a series of connections revealed themselves. Organized crime is of course connected to politics, both local and national, but if you're interested in political activity in India today--and elsewhere in the world--you are of course going to have to address the role of religion. These realms, in turn, intersect with the workings of the film and television industries. And all of this exists within the context of the "Great Game," the struggle between nation-states for power and dominance; some of the criminal organizations have mutually-beneficial relationships with intelligence agencies. So, I became really interested in this mesh of interlocking lives and organizations and historical forces. I began to trace how ordinary people were thrown about and forced to make choices by events and actors very far away; how disparate lives can cross each other--sometimes unknowingly--and change profoundly as a result. The form of the novel grew from this thematic interest, in an attempt to form a representation of this intricate web. The reader will, I hope, by the end of the novel see how the connections fall together and weave through each other. The individual characters, of course, see only a fragmented, partial version of this whole.

Jas-store.com: You interviewed many gangsters, high and low, to research your story. How did you get introductions to them? What did they think of someone writing their life?

Chandra: When I was writing my last book, Love and Longing in Bombay (in which Sartaj Singh first appears), I had contacted some police officers and crime journalists. I stayed in touch with a few of them, and when I began to think seriously about this project I asked them to introduce me to anyone who could tell me something about organized crime. Amongst the people I met in this way were some people from the "underworld," which turns out not to be an underworld at all. It's the same world we live in, inhabited by human beings who are very much like the rest of us, even in their distinctiveness. For the most part, they were as curious about me and what I was doing as I was about them. They're not big novel readers, but they had very certain opinions about representations of their lives they had seen on the big screen: "Such-and-such film got it all wrong"--they would tell me--"don't do that." And, "This was correct, that was not." So I listened, and I hope I got it mostly right.

Jas-store.com: For most American readers--like me--your story is full of slang and cultural references that we can't hope to follow. For me that's part of the charm--I feel like I'm immersed in a world I don't fully understand. Were you thinking of a particular audience as you wrote?

Chandra: I wanted to use the English that we actually speak in India, the language that I would use to tell this story if I were sitting in a bar in Mumbai talking to a friend. This English would be sprinkled with words from many Indian languages, and we would share a universe of cultural referents and facts that a reader from another country wouldn't recognize instantly. This, of course, is an experience that all of us have in a very various world. I remember reading British children's stories as a kid, and having long discussions with friends about what "crumpets" and "clotted cream" could possibly be. An Indian reader reading a novel about Arizona by an American writer might have no idea what a "pueblo" was, or why you went to a "Circle-K" to get a bottle of milk. But the context tells you something about what is being referred to, and there is a distinct delight in discovering a new world and figuring out its nuances. This is one of the great gifts of reading, that it can transport you into foreign landscapes. It's one of the reasons I read books from other cultures and places, and I hope American readers will share in this pleasure.

Jas-store.com: Your book has dozens of characters who could live in books of their own. Aside from your two main figures, the policeman Sartaj Singh and the criminal Ganesh Gaitone, which was your favorite character to write?

Chandra: That would have to be Sartaj's mother, Prabhjot Kaur, as a young girl in pre-Partition India, I think. She's curious, innocent, and passionate; writing that chapter was hard and exhilarating.

Jas-store.com: The movies of Bollywood (and Hollywood) are everywhere in your story, and many in your family (and you yourself) have been screenwriters and directors. For someone new to Indian film, what are some of your favorites you'd recommend?

Chandra: A very small sampling from the '50s onwards might be: Pyaasa (Thirst, 1957); Kaagaz ke Phool ("Paper Flowers," 1959); Mughal-e-Azam ("The Great Mughal," 1960); Sholay ("Embers," 1975); Parinda ("Bird," 1989); Satya (1998); Lagaan ("Land Tax," 2001); Lage Raho Munnabha ("Keep at it, Munnabhai," 2006).

 
Customer Reviews for  'Sacred Games: A Novel (P.S.)'
 
sacred games
good read with excellent character development. good story line. the author takes you to india with excellent insight into cops bad guy politicans and religion
 
Sacred Games
I originally purchased this book from another source some time ago, and when I was about a third of the way through it realized how important I thought the book was. I went back to the source and purchased the last two remaining copies and immediately gave it to two friends. Last month, I was with another group of friends and we were discussing books, and I mentioned this book to them. They seemed interested and I purchased four more copies from Jas-store. I promptly sent them out to more friends. As a typical American of northern European extraction, I knew of the cultures but was unaware of the subtleties of those cultures that this book portrays. I believe that India and the middle east and their religions and differences are destined to play most major roles in the world for a long time to come, and I think that this work does a fabulous job of portraying the situation. We would all do well to read this, because, I fear that this is our future.
 
Leadership lessons from unexpected quarters
A thoroughly engrossing, gripping, and fast paced read. Simplistic in narration, delves into the realms of the human mind and has moments of brilliance in shedding insights into our own individual selves. More than anything else I found the book to provide critical leadership lessons that can be applied positively in our daily lives (personal and professional).
 
Superficial, overrated and ultimately a waste of time
I was pretty disappointed with this novel, mainly because of Chandra's writing style. I've read a fair amount of contemporary South Asian lit., and Chandra falls well below writers such as Rushdie or Ghose. I've been to Bombay, and somewhat familiar with the city and language, and Chandra does a fair job of creating local verisimilitude. But his writing style is facile, in the best and worst sense of the word. He has a great ease with language, and he lets it get away from him because of this ease. His use of adjectives, for example, seems to be the same for almost all people and things. In a very typical Post Modern way he is always stressing shimmering surfaces, superficial aspects, and the "interconnectedness_ of things. He is a typical PoMo author in that he is always stressing the playfulness of things - while attempting to write a crime novel. His register just isn't suitable for the topic at hand - he renders his own subject trite.

The inserts are a waste of time, and again, critiquing his register, all the characters sound approximately the same. There are some good passages, but there are some very badly written ones. I got the feeling after 200 pages or so that he had a number of hopppers, like the ones used for Powerball, Lotto, whatever state you're in (I'm in Kathmandu Nepal), and gave 'em a twirl whenever he needed to described something, and then just plucked out adjectives. Like Vikram Seth, Chandra is a talented writer. Unlike Seth, he seems to have little to say. So he likes telling stories. He could use a good editor. I have nothing against long novels - I've waded through Proust's tome twice now, and read Joyce, Tolstoy, Rushdie, many long novels. This one is just beach reading.

If you want a good book on Bombay, pick up Sukhetu Mehta's non-fiction work "Bombaby Maximum City." And give this one a pass.
 
An absorbing read, but . . .
I was having such a satisfying read, until that late chapter on "two deaths" that contained the back-story about Aadil. That was a grind for the most part and unnecessary to the story, but managed to leave me with a visual image about the event that led to his life of crime (and death of Katekar) that I'm still trying to purge from memory. I wish someone had warned me about that, but since nobody did, I'll put in this 2 cents for anyone else who doesn't enjoy being bored and revolted: when you reach that chapter, skip ahead about 40 pages to part II where it starts talking about Sharmeen. It's tragic enough in itself to think about everything Navneet lost from her life, but at least will leave you more comfortable with the book.
 
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