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Reviews for Q&A

 

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Hooray! Horray! Hooray!

What is unique is the craft of storytelling that Vikas brings to his first book. Equally very telling is the journey of life that Ram then takes us along on.

 

From carefully crafted vignettes of Asia's largest slum, Dharavi, which is where Ram serves fried chicken and whisky along with his waiter friends, to his tribulations in a typical Mumbai slum until a saviour lawyer (semblance of NGO-activists), Vikas brings to life portraits rather than caricatures which is why there is no typical image that we can immediately associate with. And yet every image is exactly as real as the author intends it to be. In essence the character of the protagonist is an everyday person with an atypical take on life only because of the quiz show he wins.

 

The catapulting of victory as a defining moment in his life is overtaken by the cynicism of a world which creates little identity boxes and keeps people in them: seldom allowing them to break the mould and become one of us. The poignancy of the plot is mirrored in the travails of Ram, without being lost in the convolutions.

 

The pleasing attributes of this book are underscored by the simplicity of language, which conveys rather complicated emotions. Then there’s the deft touch of numbering chapters with prize money scales (Chapter 1 is 1,000, Chapter 2 is 2,000) so that the reader too feels like he winning a Kaun Banega Crorepati clone.

 

If you are looking for India's answer to Hercules Poirot with the attendant characters etched in candour and colour, then Q&A more than delivers.

 

The layering of the plot is something remarkable, because in his quest to answer questions, there are several more that life throws up for Ram. The book is a treatise on the life he leads and thus the kaleidoscope of questions that confront him.

 

In a way, it eptimoises all that life is for the common man in India: for whom even an honest victory is uncommon: almost met with ridicule and disbelief. A system that never provides honest answers to some probing questions. Meanwhile:

 

Q: What should you do with this book?

A: Read it and treasure it.

 

Suhel Seth in The Financial Express January 23, 2005

 

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Who will read a rollicking book?

When a book lands in your lap that is stashed with moments about life in a Mumbai chawl, homosexuality, incest, the battle of the have-nots and the haves, orphan-hood, more homosexuality and juvenile homes, your eyes do tend to roll skywards. But one would do well to fix one's eyes on the pages of this eminently laconic book, which gathers all the clichés that flock the totem-pole called Indian writing in English and turns them delightfully on a slow spit.

 

Swarup's protagonist is a mix of an urbanised version of Swami from R.K. Narayan's Malgudi stories and Italo Calvino's naive to the point of exasperation Marcovaldo. The language is deceptively simple, and the narrative joins dots to present a picture that is as funny as it is dark.

 

Behind the gauze of playfulness and ironic description, the reader can't help but wonder whether Swarup is also trying to net a fish that's swimming at a deeper level of the water. For at its core, Thomas's story investigates the  distinction made between knowledge and luck.

 

Q And A is that rare novel that chugs along on the parallel tracks of being a rollicking read as well as being a polished, varnished, finished work of impressive craftsmanship. So here's the question: Why do I recommend reading Q And A? Is it because a) the book has already been snapped up for movie rights? b) Swarup writes about 'real India' in a fresh 'n' funny way? c) it taxes the mind just enough to leave spaces for the real ice-breakers? d) it is all of the above? No prizes for guessing the right answer.

 

Indrajit Hazra in Hindustan Times January 2, 2005.

 

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Worth The Money

An enthusiastic debut worth devouring. Vikas Swarup weaves a delightful yarn. The endearing tales of Ram Mohammad Thomas make for a heart warming debut fiction. The story stays with the reader for its remarkable and magical story of a young boy who believes that “a waking dream is always more fleeting than a sleeping one.” So go ahead and read this enchanting tale of the good over the baneful.

 

Gayatri Rajwade in the Sunday Tribune  February 6, 2005

 

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           Swarup's debut novel is impressive. At one level, there is nothing in his protagonist's history that can be called truly fantastic. Each event – from winning the game show to getting employed by an Australian diplomat who fancies himself as a spymaster- could have happened to someone. What is interesting is the way these plausible incidents are stitched together to create a fantastic tale.

 

Swarup has good command over the language. The writing is tight and crisp. But best of all, he knows how to begin his story and, even more important, to end it on just the right note.

 

Prosenjit Datta in Businessworld 28 February, 2005

 

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           Through the questions and answers of the quiz show, the history of Ram's life starts to take shape.

 

Jumping backward and forward in time, we learn about his early life as an orphan in Paharganj, his friendships, his loves and losses, his entanglements with fading movie stars, gangsters and foreign spies.

 

Ram's stories touch on some broader issues in contemporary Indian life: political corruption, extremes of wealth and poverty, domestic abuse, and tensions between Hindu and Muslim. But Vikas Swarup is never heavy-handed when dealing with these themes, and Ram's life, though fraught with misfortune, is not unrelentingly bleak.

 

Like the Bollywood films his best friend, Salim, is obsessed with, Ram's tales have a way of cutting across genres and different styles of story-telling. They combine tragedy and comedy, intrigue, mystery and sometimes farce.

 

Ram himself is a likable character and an engaging narrator. He is witty, observant, sceptical and pragmatic, but never cynical, and readers are likely to find themselves easily drawn into his adventures.

 

Q and A is Indian diplomat Swarup's first novel and already looks set to be a huge international success. Accessible and completely engrossing, it is probably the best read of the year so far. 

 

Julian Novitz on www.stuff.co.nz

 

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           Question by question, chapter by chapter, Ram Mohammed Thomas — there’s a story behind his Hindu-Muslim-English name — takes…us, on a tour of his life and in the process, we learn about Indian movie stars, paedophilia, life in the chawls (slums), alcoholism and drug abuse, the mutilation of children so they can beg, gangsters, poetry, cricket, the histories of the Taj Mahal and the 1971 Indian-Pakistan conflict, autism and prostitution. It is also threaded with the saving graces of friendship, loyalty and love, providing a rare, seemingly effortless brew of humour, drama, romance and social realism.

 

And it’s great fun. Ram has been an extremely enterprising boy during his short life, taking work wherever he can find it…By the time Ram comes to the final question — he, and his lucky one-rupee coin, are flying, and the epilogue, six months after his triumph, reveals some most satisfactory uses for the money, including some nice juicy revenge on truly villainous types.

 

Swarup…has achieved a triumph with this thrilling, endearing work which gets into the heart and soul of modern India.

 

Linda Herrick in the New Zealand Herald March 18, 2005

 

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           Q and A is an unconventional novel. Unconventional in the sense that though it has a prologue, which partially spells out a pattern for the subsequent narrative flow, it does not resort to a standard storytelling style. And certainly not a standardized narrative with a beginning, a middle, and an end. Even if one takes the opening and closing as the beginning and the end, it has no middle, so to say. Instead it has 12 gripping stories, tales or short narratives of varied lengths. And they tell in a racy, lyrical manner the tragic-comic experiences of a have-not who goes on to become a billionaire by sheer grit and determination even before he is out of his teens.  (This) lyrical book breaks new ground in storytelling.

 

Suresh Kohli in National Review February 2005

 

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           The one thing that Q and A, Vikas Swarup's debut novel brings forth most candidly and graphically is that every nameless face may have a surprising story to tell. That an 'ordinary' person may have unknowingly gone through the most extraordinary experiences in his life. That 'general knowledge' is not always about erudition and education; that life's circumstances, when experienced with sharp perception, can teach more than books ever can. ...The two contradictory stands – one with the page-turner sort  of pace, and the other, of the realistic novel that requires a dense, empathetic description – stand out in the book.

 

First City February 2005

 

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           Q and A…is a bloody good book. No two ways about it. It unfolds much in the same way as a Bollywood potboiler. But it does so unselfconsciously. Vikas Swarup is not embarrassed by any of the reference points that have inspired him to write the book.

 

India comes alive in this book. The India of the real Indians, who patronise these films, drown themselves in the adulation of film stars and believe naively that it is possible to win millions in a television game show!

 

This India is not the India of dissenting writers who write soppy tales about middle class housewives pining for lovers and find it difficult to make it to the twenty thousand list but nonetheless it is the India of a throbbing billion that we encounter on the streets. The India that indulges itself in the escapist fare doled out by the Mumbai film industry and contributes to the TRPs of the soaps and gameshows! Ram Mohammad Thomas, the protagonist of Swarup’s novel may not be the face of the only India that we know about. But he is most certainly recognisable.

 

The characters we encounter in the novel, be it the guileless Salim, the dutiful Lajwanti, or Nita, the whore pining for redemption, are all stereotypical and yet entirely believable. It is easy to feel for them. It is also easy to wish for a ride into sunset with them.

 

Swarup delivers all that at the end of a roller coaster ride - part quiz show, part morality tale.

 

Vijjay Nair in the Deccan Herald  February 27, 2005

 

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           If the success of novels is to be measured by their galloping pace and sheer readability, you can't put this one down. I gulped it down with great relish in a few hours.

 

Given the ingenious simplicity of the plot's framework – at once a comment on how TV contests pander to audiences in the age of avarice – Swarup has got most things right. He is also pointing at obvious ethical dilemmas in a country where divisions of caste class and, above all, the wide abyss between rich and poor, nags at any notion of equality, education and social justice.

 

Even if read as pure entertainment, Q and A introduces you to a cast of memorable, madcap characters, some better drawn than others: the geeky, spy-mad Australian diplomat in Delhi who loses his wife and job, or the autistic boy Shankar, Lajwanti the theiving maid and other residents of the princess' outhouse in her mansion in Agra. Where characters were clichéd, rather like a Dickensian dramatis personae recast in contemporary India, there were enough slick twists to redeem their implausibility.

 

Sunil Sethi in The Outlook January 31, 2005

 

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           It isn't rare for a diplomat to have something published, in-depth analysis of an international crisis or his memoirs most likely. Unheard of is his penning a novel while still in the service. Yet this is what Indian diplomat Vikas Swarup, presently posted in the Ministry of External Affairs in New Delhi, has done. Q & A stands for Questions and Answers, which has an original plot. (The novel) is informative and breezy.

 

Bernard Trink in The Bangkok Post

 

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           A life story being revealed through the framework of a public performance is rather apt. With the democratisation of culture, a life story’s currency is often correlated to its capacity for spectacle. And television — with its reality programmes, talk shows and quiz programmes — is a medium that’s increasingly refracting ordinary lives and everyday encounters into rivetting drama.

 

Swarup has caught this interface. In Q and A Ram’s life must pass through multiple filters, it must be told and retold in different ways. From the questions posed to him — and the record provided on the DVD — to his backgrounders for Smita, to the final tying up of all the loose ends, Ram is perhaps being put to a higher test. At the age of 18, his crowded life must be straightened out to disclose a compact honesty.

 

For Swarup the quiz show is also a template to tell the story of modern India. It is a depiction with a moral edge. Ram is witness to so much abuse that early enough Swarup seems to be in danger of trading in stereotypes. But in the tidiness of the ending, it turns into a tale of redemption, a plea for the salience of hope, no matter how great the odds.

 

Evolutionists and physicists have been analysing a computer game called Life to investigate the secrets of the universe. In Swarup’s telling, life itself becomes a game, shards of memory becoming pieces of a larger jigsaw.

 

Mini Kapoor in The Indian Express December 26, 2004

 

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           There is a midnight knock in Dharavi and the police drag an 18-year old into the waiting jeep. The question: how did the illiterate waiter ram Mohammad Thomas win a billion rupees in a television quiz show. Vikas Swarup's debut novel Q and A is the slum boy's confessional in a night – an extraordinary narrative in which the familiar Kaun Banega Crorepati questions require existential explanations.

 

 From the Sphinx which waylaid the Thebean travellers with questions to Amitabh Bachchan's baritone queries which had a nation hooked on TV, turning a quiz to pop culture's ultimate extravaganza as well as the consumerist Indian's answer to the epics, the Q and A has a history of its own.

 

Swarup's Q and A is a picaresque through the underbelly of urban India where evil hides in the most ordinary places....Despite an overdose of darkness, of the evil's endless trysts with a boy, the novel is for most parts stripped of overt sentimentality. It is the terseness of narrative that gives the book a contemporaneity.

 

From Dharavi to the Taj Mahal, it is an Indian panorama, bleak and grand by turns. As street children Salim and Thomas sit on the front row of Regal talkies, consuming the other worldly fare – Salim dreaming of becoming a star; Thomas fantasising about the heroine. It is a world that they finally break into and as the twin strands of  real and reel, of a biography and a TV quiz merge, Q and A ends in – what else – a perfect Sholay moment.

 

It is the tale of new millennium's just-turned adults, the heirs to midnight's overgrown children.

 

Charmy  Harikrishnnan In India Today January 10, 2005

 

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           No doubt a polished debut, Q and A is also bang on the publisher's pulse. The linguistic style is simple, peppy and very Life of Pi. It is not often that we get such fast paced action, which, like a breathless express train, stops only at special stations, punch lines or when the quizmaster says, "You just won a 100 million rupees!"

 

Shinie Antony in The Week January 23, 2005

 

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           As Ram Mohammad Thomas narrates his life story in 13 controlled, quick paced episodes that link into each quiz query, the reader realises that the implausible can turn plausible in life's great game of chance. Ram's is a seesaw tale underlined by hope, of a survivor in the underbelly of society.

 

Aditi De in The Hindu Business Line February 4, 2005

 

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           Although the theme appears to be deceptively simple, this modern day parable smashes a whole gamut of stereotypes about genius, celebrity and showbiz.

 

Manish Chand Indo-Asian News Service January 13, 2005

 

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               It was only half way through the novel, Q&A, that I wondered whether its author, Vikas Swarup, was a full-time writer. The book had me riveted with its warm and witty dissection of serendipity, and I was puzzled why I hadn't read more of Swarup’s work in the past. Was he a young, first-time novelist? The book had a maturity, which suggested otherwise.

 

Perhaps he only wrote in Hindi and his previous books hadn't been translated, but there was an international feel to his writing, a firsthand knowledge of other cultures. And then I turned to the page at the beginning of my proof copy (the book has been released in India, but not yet in Britain) and all was revealed. "Vikas Swarup is an Indian diplomat who has served in Turkey, the United States, Ethiopia and Great Britain. He is presently posted in the ministry of external affairs in New Delhi."

 

I should have guessed. Another author pretending to be a diplomat!

 

Jon Stock in The Week February 27, 2005

 

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           Appealing first novel. A Star Choice - The Bookseller  7 January, 2005

 

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           As GV Desani did with All About H. Hatter, Vikram Seth with The Golden Gate and Arundhati Roy with  The God of Small Things, Vikas Swarup seems to have taken the literary world by the proverbial storm with Q and A. By writing his very first novel this career diplomat seems to have set new parameters in defining fiction.

 

Swagat, the official magazine of Indian Airlines and Alliance Air  February 2005 issue.

 

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           The Indian author Vikas Swarup mixes realism, Bollywood and a critique of society and media into a successful novel about an extraordinarily lucky boy.

 

Berlingske Tidende (Major Danish newspaper) October 25, 2004

 

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           It is an original and interesting concept that Vikas Swarup brings to life in his first novel Q&A. There are fascinating, funny and cruel stories behind all of Ram's quiz answers which make Swarup's novel successful entertainment.

 

IN October 2004 (Monthly women's magazine in Denmark)

 

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           Q&A is fantastic, exciting, optimistic, dramatic at times and touching. Will appeal to all readers who like to be told a fascinating story.

 

DBC (Danish library information service)

 

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           Q&A * * * *  (Four Stars). An excellent feel-good story where qualities of kindness, friendship and resourcefulness win at the end.

 

ALT for Damerne September 9,2004 (one of the largest women's magazine in Denmark)

 

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           It is quite an adventure which the Indian diplomat Vikas Swarup serves up in his first novel Q&A: The Boy who had all the Answers. Throughout the novel runs a thread of  solid indignation at injustice of any kind. Abuse of power, violence and the arrogance of bureaucrats are not allowed to pass unchallenged. But Vikas Swarup still manages to ensure a happy ending for all those characters the reader has come to know during the novel. And then hope that that the reader will be tempted to copy Ram's goodness. In that way, Q&A belongs to the dream factory products, but it is one of its kind, a highly successful specimen.

 

Review in Politiken (Major Danish newspaper) August 28, 2004

 

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           A lively and quirky story from a master storyteller, Q&A is the story of a poor Indian boy, Ram who finds a unique means of survival – winning the TV quiz show Who Will Win A Billion? We are taken on an amazing journey through Ram’s life and contemporary India as the story unfolds.

 

- British Council Review

 

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     This book is fantastic. Unique, cleverly structured, engaging and heartfelt, it offers a view into another world through personal stories told with great sensitivity. The book begins with Ram Mohammad Thomas sitting in an Indian prison following his win on a new high profile TV quiz show. The producers are convinced he cheated and are prepared to go to any lengths to avoid paying out his win. As his lawyer reviews the footage of the show to build the case, Ram tells heart wrenching stories from his life and the mystery unfolds. This is a real pleasure to read and reminiscent of The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time.

 

Reviewed by Mary-Jayne House in The Booklover Newsletter, March 2005

 

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     This brilliant debut novel by Indian diplomat Vikas Swarup provides an intriguing glimpse into life in contemporary India……Both moving and funny, Q and A is a compelling novel that will keep your interest to the very last page. 

 

Review on Book-club.co.nz

 

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     Swarup's novel takes us into the harsh reality of Indian life, but never forgets to entertain. In doing so, it has all the right ingredients for that growing posse of Western readers intrigued by all things Indian….. While Q and A is absolutely embedded in India with its chawls, or slums, Bollywood obsession, starving street kids, alcoholism and glistening monuments to love, it is also a story of everyman…Ram leads an adventurous life for a young man, a former street kid and one-time tour guide who grows up as the story is told, from being an orphan looked after by a kindly priest to the unlikely winner of a quiz show. But it is a lively tale, warmly told and richly coloured with the startling minutia of Indian life.

 

Sandra McLean in The Courier Mail 27 March 2005

 

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     Beautiful and witty novel. - KRO Radio, Dolce Vita

 

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     A touching and funny novel as well as a hilarious story with a certain fairytale like impropability.

 

NBD Biblion (Holland)

 

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     A picaresque novel in which a story is told in a non chronological way. In the heart-rending but eventually happy adventures of Ram Mohammed Thomas we see a critique of contemporary India. It is a joy to read, thrilling and entertaining where a few storylines are wrapped up at the end.

 

Teletext / Boekbalie

 

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     Swarup gives us a peek in the contemporary Indian society.... But most of all; the author has written a beautifully crafted novel.

 

Metro (Holland)

 

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     A funny, thrilling, and, every now and then, sad journey through all ranks of society of India which makes pleasant reading.

 

Hallal magazine

 

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     Name: Ram Mohammad Thomas

Educational qualifications: Illiterate

Occupation: Waiter

Residence: Dharavi, Asia biggest slum

Achievement: Winner of one billion rupees on a quiz show

The charge: Cheating and fraud.

 

Isn't this an interesting bio-data! And now there is even a book on this called Q&A. This is not only the story of a poor orphan boy but an utterly original and gripping novel which evokes contemporary India in all its colourful, lively and sometimes sordid manifestations.

 

Dainik Jagran (North-Eastern India's largest circulated Hindi daily), Varanasi edition 15 January 2005

 

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     The book's racy style takes one through the murky side of the metropolis. Evil is matched by unbelievable wisdom.

 

The Times of Oman January 14, 2005

 

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     Q&A certainly has its charms- Jason Overdorf Newsweek February 21, 2005

 

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     Vikas Swarup’s debut novel has one of the most arresting openings that you are likely to find in fiction this year: “I have been arrested. For winning a quiz show.”

 

With this deadpan revelation, Swarup grabs the reader by the lapels and dunks him, head first, into a plot rich in excitement, coincidence, drama, schmaltz and intrigue….Read (this book) because it is a celebration of the happenstance and serendipity of life. Read it because it is a very clever story told very cleverly and at a relentless pace.

 

Swarup drags the reader into the heart of the action with his first two sentences (there is not a single dull moment in this novel), and carries him along in this dizzying roller coaster ride through Thomas’ life.

 

Q and A is just the book for a long journey. But if you aren’t going away somewhere, don’t start it if you intend to get any sleep at night.

 

Review by Soumya Battacharya in The Sydney Morning Herald March 12-13, 2005

 

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     A Richly textured story

 

Q and A … it’s an intriguing title. And it’s an intriguing novel, too.

 

The plot hangs on the shoulders of the beautifully named Ram Mahommad Thomas, a penniless waiter and an orphan, who wins the largest Quiz show in India, and is then imprisoned for his pains. Why? Well, how could such a lowly, uneducated urchin possibly do such a thing by fair means?

 

Our hero is befriended by a young lawyer called Smita Shah, who appears out of nowhere to defend him.

 

The course of the book follows their interview, where he recounts his life story and how various incidents fitted him with the knowledge to answer certain questions.

 

It’s a satisfying, Dickensian tale of advances and reversals, good people and bad, humorous interlude and starkly tragic episode, as our Indian Pip survives to adulthood and Who Will Win a Billion?

 

As the night progresses and his tale unfolds, we and Ram uncover the answers to the quiz show … and maybe some to life as well.

 

Vikas Swarup has given us a tale peopled with a richly textured crew we can love and laugh at or weep with. He has a gift for characterisation and a lovely turn of phrase.

 

Read this book. You deserve it.

 

Kelly Vos in Daily Dispatch, South  Africa

 

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Vikas Swarup
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