Monday, March 9, 2009

The Lost Flamingoes of Bombay

Author: Siddarth Dhanvant Sanghvi
Publisher: Penguin Viking
Zone : Trying too hard

This book was clearly was written to sell, beginning with the provocative cover with Meghna Reddy.

The Lost Flamingoes of Bombay puts together some big scandals(Jessica Lal, Salman Khan running over people etc.,), of the last 2 decades and makes one story of them.There is no hiding the fact that there is no orginality. Only the names are changed to weave the story around the characters. That makes it nothing more than a clever MBA project.

You have to be patient with this book. It suffers from some of the many problems of books written nowadays- over setting the context, too many issues, inconsistent characterisation, really bad one liners - "Character building is too much work","Mumbai is about as appealing a name for a city as Gonorrhoea."

Inspite of the above the book really grabs your interest with its sensitivity and pace.The places where it works are when the reader is allowed to to use her own brains. The characters belong to a class of people that I have never met, but seem strangely familiar. The good ones are - Rhea who is married to her childhood sweetheart who she loves but is tired of it all, Samar the brilliant pianist who gives up his career but we never know why.

Not bad.

5 comments:

Unknown said...

ok so should I read it if someone lends it to me :)

AV said...

Ok so I can forget it 'coz you've given a wonderful book summary - and that's enough for sounding intelligent - about this book at least! :D

Annaps said...

Why do I always end up spending more money, reading, and summarising when you guys come off as the smart ones???

Idyll Mind said...

if you make your review seem lovelier than the book, i'm obviously not going to read it no?

The Unadorned said...

Hi Annapps,

Siddharth's "Flamingo" is no doubt a stylish narrative. But as a plot it has nothing very engrossing about it; rather it gives a feeling of a collage with its appeal not very apparent from the first look of it. Sometimes, because of its acerbic style, it appears to follow the usual route some of the Indian authors follow to be liked by western readers--say like saying about Indian corruption--but at the end of the day, the book will be known for its style which is very intimate and evocative.

I've attempted a review of the book in my blog. You may perhaps like to have a look.

Thanks.
Nanda
http://ramblingnanda.blogspot.com