Sacred Games (novel)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sacred Games
Author Vikram Chandra
Country India/USA
Language English
Genre(s) Novels
Publisher HarperCollins
Publication date 2007
Media type Print (Hardcover)
Pages 928pp
ISBN ISBN 0061130354

Sacred Games is a book by Vikram Chandra published in 2006. It has received notable reviews. Patricia Lay Brown in The New York Times writes:

"The Dickensian sweep of Bombay, as Vikram Chandra prefers to call the city — the cops on the take, the slums patrolled by mobsters, the whores turned Bollywood starlets, the headboards in million-dollar co-ops that slide away at the touch of a button to reveal hundreds of thousands in hidden rupees — is itself a protagonist in Sacred Games, Mr. Chandra’s long-awaited 900-page novel (excluding glossary) just published by HarperCollins.

[edit] Plot summary

Sacred Games combines the ambition of a 19th-century social novel with a cops-and-Bhais detective thriller. (Bhai is a Hindi and Gujarati slang term for gangster.)

As sprawling as the heat-drenched city it richly portrays, Sacred Games delves into many emotionally charged worlds of contemporary India, in particular the spidery links between organized crime, local politics and Indian espionage that lie below the shimmering surfaces of its economic renaissance. Money and corruption form the golden thread. In interweaving narratives and voices, Sacred Games takes on even larger themes, from the wrenching violence of the 1947 partition of India to the specter of nuclear terrorism.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links