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Editorial Content for Bombay Monsoon

Contributors

Reviewer (text)

L. Dean Murphy

The author of the Ellie Stone mysteries, James W. Ziskin has won Anthony and Barry awards, and the Macavity Award for Best Historical Novel. BOMBAY MONSOON launches his series set in summer 1975 Bombay (renamed Mumbai in 1995), the monsoon season.

A budding news agency had reassigned young American journalist Dan Jacobs from Vietnam and other Asian countries. India’s only female prime minister has declared The Emergency, censoring news venues and appointing herself the authority to cancel elections. “India is an enchanting place, but it can be overwhelming to foreigners.”

"Astute readers will recall each character and scene as the plot cuts to the chase. Literally."

What’s a journalist not allowed to publish news to do? Promising anonymity, Danny interviews, and surreptitiously photographs, a thug named Bikas who assassinated the relative of a police official. A few days later, Bikas wants the undeveloped film and trashes Danny’s apartment while searching for it. “People were vigilant and distrustful. Of each other, of the police, of me.”

Similarities of two MIDNIGHT IN THE GARDEN OF GOOD AND EVIL characters are evident. Danny Jacobs appears to be from the mold of journalist-author John Berendt (John Kelso in the film version). Beguiling Willy Smets, who throws lavish parties for expats in Bombay, somewhat resembles Savannah’s Joe Odom.

Willy invites Danny to the penthouse for one of his parties, where he meets exotic Sushmita, Willy’s mistress. Danny is smitten and tells himself it is only platonic feelings, although she “was clever, sexy, and…complicated.” The attraction is mutual…and complicated. The journalist raises an eyebrow when his host vaguely mentions that he is in the import-export business.

Bomber-thug Bikas makes it evident that Danny’s journalistic life is coming to an end. Make that simply life. Sushmita aids him to escape to the mountainous city of Poona (renamed Pune), where she owns a bungalow purportedly inherited from a forebear. Insufferable bigot Russ Harlan, flight attendant Birgit and even “untouchable” servant Ramu either have polar opposite doppelgängers or are not whom they seem to be. They appear throughout this geopolitical plot set in the dazzling multicultural-ethnic-linguistic subcontinent.

The panoramic view of India is truncated when the jigsaw pieces are assembled. Astute readers will recall each character and scene as the plot cuts to the chase. Literally. A chair-gripping car chase down harrowingly narrow mountain roads will have readers begging for a film adaptation. Please, Mr. Ziskin?

Teaser

The year is 1975. Danny Jacobs is an ambitious, young American journalist who’s just arrived in Bombay for a new assignment. He’s soon caught up in the chaos of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi’s domestic “Emergency.” Willy Smets is Danny’s enigmatic expat neighbor. He’s a charming man but with suspicious connections. As a monsoon drenches Bombay, Danny falls hard for Sushmita, Smets’ beguiling and clever lover --- and the infatuation is mutual. "The Emergency," a virtual coup by the prime minister, is only the first twist in the high-stakes drama of Danny’s new life in India. The assassination of a police officer by a Marxist extremist, as well as Danny’s obsession with the inscrutable Sushmita, conspire to put his career --- and life --- in jeopardy.

Promo

The year is 1975. Danny Jacobs is an ambitious, young American journalist who’s just arrived in Bombay for a new assignment. He’s soon caught up in the chaos of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi’s domestic “Emergency.” Willy Smets is Danny’s enigmatic expat neighbor. He’s a charming man but with suspicious connections. As a monsoon drenches Bombay, Danny falls hard for Sushmita, Smets’ beguiling and clever lover --- and the infatuation is mutual. "The Emergency," a virtual coup by the prime minister, is only the first twist in the high-stakes drama of Danny’s new life in India. The assassination of a police officer by a Marxist extremist, as well as Danny’s obsession with the inscrutable Sushmita, conspire to put his career --- and life --- in jeopardy.

About the Book

The last thing Danny wants to see published is his obituary.

The year is 1975. Danny Jacobs is an ambitious, young American journalist who’s just arrived in Bombay for a new assignment. He’s soon caught up in the chaos of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi’s domestic “Emergency.”

Willy Smets is Danny’s enigmatic expat neighbor. He’s a charming man, but with suspicious connections. As a monsoon drenches Bombay, Danny falls hard for Sushmita, Smets’ beguiling and clever lover --- and the infatuation is mutual.

"The Emergency," a virtual coup by the prime minister, is only the first twist in the high-stakes drama of Danny’s new life in India. The assassination of a police officer by a Marxist extremist, as well as Danny’s obsession with the inscrutable Sushmita, conspire to put his career --- and life --- in jeopardy. And, of course, the temptations of Willy Smets’s seductive personality sit squarely at the heart of the matter.

Democracy is fragile, and the lines of loyalty and betrayal often cross and cannot be untangled.