Srimad Bhagavad Gita 446

Save: 10%

Back to products
Sunshine Lane 446

Save: 10%

Subcontinental Drift: Four Decades Adrift in India and Beyond

Publisher:
Aleph
| Author:
MURRAY LAURENCE
| Language:
English
| Format:
Paperback
Publisher:
Aleph
Author:
MURRAY LAURENCE
Language:
English
Format:
Paperback

359

Save: 10%

Out of stock

Ships within:
5-7 Days

Out of stock

Weight 248 g
Book Type

ISBN:
SKU 9789383064250 Category Tag
Category:
Page Extent:
248

Nothing prepared Murray Laurence for India when he first travelled through the country in the 1970s. His first impressions were of its ‘surpassing weirdness’ but it soon cast a spell on him and for the next forty years he kept returning to India over and over again. His early journeys in the crowded third-class compartments of slow trains or in rickety buses to obscure towns and villages in the great Indian hinterland often led to strange encounters and travel disasters. Honey-tongued tricksters assailed him, bizarre locals and foreigners tried to explain the country to him, pompous officials waylaid him with impenetrable assertions and mystifying rules and a myriad other picaresque entanglements with outrageous characters ensured that every trip he made was memorable. In all the chaos and quirkiness that surrounded him, the one thing he could always count on was the spontaneous warmth and generosity of Indians which often revealed itself in surprising circumstances. Closely observed, stylishly written and very very funny, Subcontinental Drift is an unforgettable tribute to India and its people.

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Be the first to review “Subcontinental Drift: Four Decades Adrift in India and Beyond”

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Description

Nothing prepared Murray Laurence for India when he first travelled through the country in the 1970s. His first impressions were of its ‘surpassing weirdness’ but it soon cast a spell on him and for the next forty years he kept returning to India over and over again. His early journeys in the crowded third-class compartments of slow trains or in rickety buses to obscure towns and villages in the great Indian hinterland often led to strange encounters and travel disasters. Honey-tongued tricksters assailed him, bizarre locals and foreigners tried to explain the country to him, pompous officials waylaid him with impenetrable assertions and mystifying rules and a myriad other picaresque entanglements with outrageous characters ensured that every trip he made was memorable. In all the chaos and quirkiness that surrounded him, the one thing he could always count on was the spontaneous warmth and generosity of Indians which often revealed itself in surprising circumstances. Closely observed, stylishly written and very very funny, Subcontinental Drift is an unforgettable tribute to India and its people.

About Author

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Be the first to review “Subcontinental Drift: Four Decades Adrift in India and Beyond”

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

RELATED PRODUCTS

RECENTLY VIEWED