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India: A Portrait Hardcover – 27 Jan 2011

4.2 out of 5 stars 39 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 448 pages
  • Publisher: Allen Lane (27 Jan. 2011)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1846142148
  • ISBN-13: 978-1846142147
  • Product Dimensions: 16.2 x 3.9 x 24 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (39 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 114,751 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Review

French combines his lifelong passion, India, with his scholarly interest ... a fascinating anaylsis, revealing a deeper truth. (Salil Tripathi The Independent)

It is a funny, witty book; also dense, gripping, thrilling. What blazes through from each page is French's absolute and uncondescending engagement with India (Neel Mukherjee The Times)

Wide-ranging, clear-sighted, warm-hearted and immensely readable (Nirpal Dhaliwal Evening Standard)

French is a fine reporter, with an appealing fascination for all things Indian ... an accomplished portrait of momentous times in a remarkable country (Economist)

Admirable ... There are many Indias, and Patrick French sets out, with enthusiasm and empathy, to encounter as many as he can find (David Gilmour Spectator)

Mr. French compresses 63 years of post-independence history into 450-odd pages fizzing with wit, insight and infectious curiosity ... a riveting read, and one suspects that Mr. French could not pen a boring passage if he tried. (Sadanand Dhume Wall Street Journal)

About the Author

Patrick French is a writer and historian, born in England in 1966. He is the author of Younghusband: The Last Great Imperial Adventurer, which won the Somerset Maugham Award and the Royal Society of Literature W. H. Heinemann Prize, Liberty or Death: India's Journey to Independence and Division , which won the Sunday Times Young Writer of the Year Award, Tibet, Tibet: A Personal History of a Lost Land and, most recently, The World Is What It Is: The Authorized Biography of V.S. Naipaul, which was shortlisted for the Samuel Johnson Prize and won the National Book Critics Circle Award and the Hawthornden Prize. Patrick has also recently created the incredible new website: www.theindiasite.com.



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Customer Reviews

4.2 out of 5 stars
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Top Customer Reviews

Format: Paperback
This is a splendid book which covers the great sweep of Indian life and culture, illuminated with numerous individual anecdotes representing people from all levels of Indian society. The anecdotes are fascinating, covering people who have found great success in the economic liberalisation of the last 15 years, as well as those who have continued to live a life of struggle and poverty.

Patrick French draws out the numerous contrasts which make such an impression on visitors to India; a meritocratic culture which is still infused with caste and status, a deliberately secular society in which religion is intertwined with daily life, a land of great wealth ( 4 of 8 richest people in the world are Indian) which has the largest population of illiterate people in the world.

Having recently visited India, I found that this book brought back memories of the colours, the smells, and the vibrancy which I had found to be almost overwhelming, and helped to explain many of the features of Indian life which I had found so fascinating and confusing.

Divided into three sections; Nation, Wealth and Society, this book is highly recommended for those who would like to know more about the country of 1.2 billion people, which has just overtaken Germany as the world's fourth largest economy. If you are going to visit do read this. If you are not yet planning to visit, this book will make you want to...

Highly recommended
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By P.Rox VINE VOICE on 20 Jan. 2011
Format: Hardcover Vine Customer Review of Free Product ( What's this? )
As someone who grew up in India, I tend to read a number of books and articles and watch most documentaries that feature India. Some of them are pure opinion and often patronising. However, Patrick French has done his research thoroughly and brings up a lot about India, how it works, the underlying issues, how things like government and money are intertwined and so on.

If you are looking for a real in depth understanding of how India ticks and doesn't tick then this is a great place to start. If you are looking for a general overview of the country and culture then this might be a little bit too deep as a first touch.

For those who want to delve more into Indian culture this is highly recommended.
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By F Henwood TOP 1000 REVIEWER on 18 Feb. 2012
Format: Paperback
Recently there has been a spate of books on the rise of China but curiously very little for the general reader on the equally remarkable rise of India. French has offered just such a book, a snapshot of an India in transition. The book is divided into three parts. The first section traces the development of India's representative parliamentary democracy, which, against the odds, works reasonably well. The second part deals with the transformation of India's economy from stagnant statism to an open, dynamic trade orientated economy and the final section covers, among other things, the persistence of ancient religion in the teeth of an emerging consumer society, the caste system and other cultural quirks of Indian life.

Patrick French is an excellent writer and his latest offering does not disappoint. He offers an account of his travels around the country, a snapshot of contemporary India, structured through a series of vignettes, interviews with Indians from all walks of life. It's easy to sneer at this approach and complain that this is not a comprehensive academic text on Indian society and economy but that is to criticise him for a book he did not set out to write. Oral testimony recorded in a book is an entirely respectable genre of writing - think of the late Studs Turkel. The merit of French's approach is allow Indians themselves to tell things as they see it, from a variety of perspectives, and not how French sees it. There are many realities experienced in India and this book captures a sample. It certainly gives the armchair traveler a flavour of a country. Through these witnesses, he succeeds in portraying a country of phenomenal potential and dynamism, coexisting alongside great squalor and injustice, a warts-and-all portrait.
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Format: Hardcover Vine Customer Review of Free Product ( What's this? )
Having recently stocially ploughed through the never ending Indian "novel" "Shantaram" by Gregory David Roberts and found its mixture of pathetic GCSE-grade philosophy and truly awful love story possibly one of poorest reads of recent years it was something of a breath of fresh air to pick up Patrick French's new portrait of India. French is an historian with a panoramic knowledge of India and all things Indian. His book, "Liberty or Death - India's Journey to Independence and Division" published in 1997 was seen in some quarters as revisionist tome particularly when it came to his warts and all portrait of the main protagonists Ghandi and Nehru, yet it was scintillating history of a big subject that he did full justice.

His latest book attempts to build on this historial past and get under the skin of the new India and answer the question why is India like it is today. He uses three themes namely Rashtra or nation, Lakshmi or wealth and Samaj or society to draw out the mass of contradictions of the Indian sub continent and infuse it with stories and illustrations provided by the intriguing people of this great and rapidly developing nation. It would be easy for French just to concentrate on the key contradiction namely the rapidly rising middle class of India set against the vicious poverty of millions of its people. Yet French does more than this. In a chapter on the British economist J M keynes and his fascination with India he illustrates how an aspiring entrepreneur T V Sundaram Lyengar started a small bus service by offering wayside meals to Indian peasants suspicious of any form of transport.
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