Sunday, February 17, 2013

Fyatarur Kumbheepak

The hilarious magic realism contains the exploits

  • Arthabhabe Fyataru
  • IPLe Fyataru
  • Basanta Utsabe Fyataru
  • Susheel Samaje Fyataru 
  • TVr Gyanjame Fyataru
  • Fyatarur RDX
  • 200 Bachar Pore Fyataru
It started from where it ended in Byombachak. I don’t know whether it is the fact now that I’ve been acquainted with the flying Fyatarus and their curious cases or whether it is really a bit unlike its predecessor but this compilation is less humorous. Concerning more recent events like IPL, terrorism, publicity stunts, atmospheric threats, the Fyatarus again makes the public gape in wonder at their presence and their capabilities. DS’ dim-wit and raw emotions, Purandar’s frustrations and his poems guided by Madan’s will and cunning makes the team a force to reckon with creating nuisance for the force and the so called intelligentsia. DS’ leg-pulling by Purandar gives some enjoyable moments in the book. The recurrent character Nabani Dhar and Meghuboudi reappears in the most hilarious situations as do Bajra Ghosh with his infamous novels and stories. With these again the depictions are grimly funny and immensely enjoyable.

Sunday, February 10, 2013

Dongri to Dubai Six Decades of the Mumbai Mafia


A sensational insight into the underworld that evolved in Bombay and gradually raced to the international arena as been put in words by S. Hussain Zaidi, a veteran in investigative journalism in the Mumbai media. Starting with excerpt of the thrilling telephonic interview of Dawood, the book is filled with more startling revelations of the Mumbai underworld interspersing politics and entertainment. In this extensive compilation, not always followed chronologically, the chapters detail out the background of the gangs leading to the formation of the infamous D company. Not only this but the Bombay police heroics and some courageous journalism, in the midst of the maximum heat, are also being portrayed. The smuggling business etched on a path of unavoidable bloodshed, leading to terrorism at large, intertwined with international affairs has been clearly portrayed in this serious yet fast paced narrative. Augmented by several snaps of the crime lords and assassins the narrative has been made even more gripping. Personally my particular observation was the peculiar resemblance of the life in crime as detailed in this book to that depicted in Mario Puzo’s fictional Sicilian mafia novels and Francis Ford Coppola’s rendering of the Godfather saga made decades earlier, which seem to emphasize the point that beneath the glory and glamour of the underworld, their lives are always predictable. Some very clear parallel can be drawn as in Khalid Pehelwan’s inhuman revenge that can be compared with Luca Brasis’s torturous killings of assassins deployed to kill Vito Corleone. Another was the attempt at Dawood’s life with the climax of Copolla’s Godfather III.

Friday, February 01, 2013

The All Bengali Crime Detectives


The author Suparna Chatterjee, in her first endeavour in writing mystery story, has excelled herself in the sense that she has brought more than mere mystery in the novel. Heightening the charm of Calcuttans, the novel is equally a story of the people of the city as it is of crime and detection. Akhil Banerjee, a Calcutta High Court retired judge of late, finds himself entangled in a puzzling mystery of a stolen gem that was reportedly stolen under his very nose. He forms a secret club comprising of himself and three other senior citizens - the adventurous at heart, delightedly forgetful yet responsible Bibhuti Bose, the avid smoker and a good friend Chandan Mukherjee, a veteran geologist and a serious teacher Debdas Guha Ray - all determined to solve the crime that undermined their prestige. As the plot evolves, so evolves the personal lives of these four in front of the reader and it is in this stage that you will fall in love with all the characters of the story.
Realistic to the very end, the story never tries anything heroic, yet the heroism in the simple actions makes the story one of the collector's edition. Chatterjee has published the book two years back and I for one want more from her pen. The ABCD or Akhil, Bibhuti, Chandan, Debdas of the All Bengali Crime Detectives not only brings back cherished memories of the intellectual detective stories, devoid of unnecessary heroics but is also a pleasant yet clear reminder of Feluda, Topshe and Jatayu. I can also draw a parallel with Alexander McCall Smith, the way he described Botswana, in the same way Chatterjee has described, no not the city, but the citizens of the mystery capital of India. As she thoroughly completes the mystery clearing all the elements of suspicion from the reader's mind, she keeps the immediate future of several characters untold. I think this is another point where she has proved modern enough. The central plot is complete but the incompleteness of the rest nowhere keeps the story open ended but provides food for thought that makes it both enjoyable and realistic.

Sunday, January 27, 2013

The Fourth K

This isn’t the familiar Mafia routine with treachery and deception at every turn of the page where, presided by the silent but sure law of Omerta, the stories revolve around revenge and the sense of honour that binds syndicates. But this time the story is of politics and dictators.
When the terrorists assassinates the Pope and holds a plane full of travelers including the first daughter of the United States as hostage, it depends on one man and his staff to thwart the ploys of the terror group. Parallel to that is the threat of a mini atom bomb in the heart of the city. With all these difficulties along with the opposition and the influential Socrates club trying to oversee his every move, President Francis Xavier Kennedy finds it the ultimate challenge of his career. To know how the crisis is managed you have to go through the book but two things I can promise, one, the story is superbly orchestrated devoid of undue heroism that makes it more realistic. And two, though this is not about the underworld, but Puzo draws a clear parallel with political maneuvers that shapes nations and creates dictators. With exciting revelations of fictitious political machinery, the only disappointing is occasional lengthy introductions to characters and the subtlety of the multiple climaxes that decelerates the pace a bit.

Saturday, January 05, 2013

Harano Diaryr Khonje


Bimal Kar’s detective other than Kikira, used to bore me with maybe his only appearance in the novel Harano Diaryr Khonje but for the fact that I was somewhat optimistically biased about Bimal Kar in recent days that I again took up the ebook to refresh my memory about the story which I’d once read in Anandamela. To say that it felt excellent would be not true but the adventure or the slow evolution of the plot seemed now to be so akin to traditional detective novels which I’m sure I was not matured to appreciate at my younger days. But the slowness of the pace seemed to get the better of the story and the climactic revelations that ought to be more splendid seemed not so astounding. It is more of a standard adventure story than detective but for the last two pages, where suspense was created very rapidly and there too detection never seemed a prime motive and so the readers can enjoy Kar’s easy paced storytelling but for the fans of stories involving true investigators this may not be so much of an enthusiastic choice.