From Publishers Weekly
Tough to put down, this engrossing follow-up to Season of the Monsoon (1993), brings back half-Indian, half-English George Sansi, newly retired from the Bombay police. Sansi is tapped by his former boss, Narendra Jamal, for some undercover sleuthing around the city of Goa, where plans for a free port have shifted greed and crime into high gear. Jamal hopes to bring down a corrupt, high-ranking minister through his links to the dealings of Prem Gupta, who manages the minister's illegal business (and Goa's government). Using a vacation with Annie Ginnaro, his California-born lover who writes for the Times of India, as a cover, Sansi soon finds that one of Jamal's contacts has fled town and that the other, a former police pathologist disturbed by the suspicious death of a nine-year-old American girl, is afraid to help. "There is no law here," he warns. While Sansi stakes out Gupta, Ginnaro makes friends among the area's transplanted American hippies, who are now in the way of Goa's development. Sansi's blue eyes are more distinctive than his personality and Ginnaro is often more irritating than spirited, but Mann sketches the character of "the most corrupt society on earth" with enthusiasm and detail, delivering his imaginative, unpredictable tale with nearly irresistible style.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
In his second George Sansi mystery (the first was
Season of the Monsoon ), Mann evokes India's peculiar mix of fatalism, corruption, and desperation with skill and wicked wit. This time around Sansi, a handsome man who inherited blue eyes from his British father and creamy brown skin and dark hair from his Indian mother, has left the police force to practice law, but his old boss calls him back to the fold. It seems that plans for a free port in the coastal state of Goa have started a turf war among various factions engaged in illicit ventures. The region is called the Ganja Coast because of the seemingly unlimited supply of drugs available to the hordes of American and European hippies who live along the vast beaches. Life is lazy, cheap, and hedonistic until greed turns lethal and a young girl is murdered. As Sansi, posing as a tourist, investigates, both he and his American journalist girlfriend find themselves in the thick of things. More than a clever and macabre tale of drug smuggling and betrayal, Mann's novel captures the paradoxical nature of life in modern India.
Donna Seaman
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.