From Publishers Weekly
In a quietly devastating, gripping political chronicle based on his frequent trips to India between 1982 and 1994, Indian-born Mehta, a New Yorker staff writer, ruefully portrays a nation mired in corruption and intimidation at every level of society. He relates Prime Minister Indira Gandhi's military assault on Sikh separatists in 1984, and faults her for failure to negotiate; four months later she was assassinated by two Sikh bodyguards. Mehta criticizes Indira's son and successor, former airline pilot Rajiv Gandhi, for trickle-down economic policies that focused on the urban middle class but ignored India's 570 million villagers who live in squalid poverty. After his assassination by Tamil secessionists of Sri Lanka in 1991, India plunged deeper into religious, ethnic and political violence. Mehta (Up at Oxford) questions the national priorities of this Third World nuclear power, which recently doubled its military budget while neglecting the basic needs of its citizens. He also reports on the Union Carbide toxic-gas disaster in Bhopal, India's maddening telephone service, divorced Muslim women's legal struggles for rights and the revival of Hindu extremism.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Mehta has written many books and
New Yorker pieces about India, the land of his birth, including the autobiographical series, Continents of Exile. Here, in his usual impeccable prose, he considers the main events of the last dozen years in Indian politics, beginning with the contentious aftermath of the accidental death of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi's eldest son, Sanjay, and the sensational dispute between Gandhi and her ambitious daughter-in-law. Anxious to consolidate her power and preserve the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty, Gandhi persuaded her surviving son, Rajiv, to give up his peaceful life as a commercial pilot and enter the political arena. Although a soft-spoken but firm critic of Indira Gandhi, Mehta is an admirer of Rajiv, a decent, courteous, and dignified man who preferred reconciliation to confrontation but who was doomed to share his mother's fate: assassination by radical Sikhs. As for other matters, Mehta exposes the shameful facts about the tragedy at Bhopal, the wasteful Ninth Asian Games of 1982, and New Delhi's notorious telephone system.
Donna Seaman