From Kirkus Reviews:
Murder in Bombay--in an enjoyable if strained entry in the serial-killer/travelogue subgenre pioneered by Martin Smith in Gorky Park and highlighted by William Bayer's Jerusalem-set Pattern Crimes and Joseph Koenig's Tehran-based Brides of Blood. ``Anything--absolutely anything--can happen in India,'' says hero-cop George Sansi, and as presented by Mann (The Traitor's Contract, 1990), anything--and nearly everything--does, beginning with the discovery at Film City, India's Hollywood, of a horribly savaged body. Sansi--an appealingly saturnine character who's perhaps the only blue-eyed Indian walking the subcontinent (courtesy of the British general who sired him)--pursues the case with his usual moral diligence, stepping on powerful toes as he links the body to a gay prostitution ring serving film bigwigs. The Special Branch inspector is pulled into a second case as well, trying to stop a war between rival Bombay gangsters, a subplot that points up the novel's major strength and weakness: Mann's crackling depiction of India as a madhouse where the only real law is that of survival (most forcefully displayed during Sansi's visit to Dharavai, Bombay's fetid slum-suburb); and the author's forced striving for eccentrically interesting incidents and characters (as seen in the gangster Paul Kapoor, who talks in 50's slang and worships Elvis). Sansi can't stop Kapoor from slaying his rival, but, after a second mutilated body surfaces, the cop does trace the killings back to a 50-year-old murder spree--and to that long-ago killer's grandson, living in London, where the novel attenuates into a dull tracking of the culprit by Sansi, followed by a Bombay- set finale that seems stapled on. Fast-moving and fascinating for its exotic lore, but you can hear Mann's mechanics clanking away. Still, the engagingly earnest Sansi and his amazing India deserve a sequel. -- Copyright ©1993, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
From Publishers Weekly:
This first-rate crime novel employs the classic elements of the noir thriller: an incorruptible loner cop; an ambitious reporter; gangland organizations; grotesque minor characters; an urban landscape ranging from the fashionable to the seedy, contrasted with the make-believe world of a film studio; a shadowy sexual underworld; an unidentified corpse; and a maniacal killer. But the setting isn't Los Angeles. In a nice twist, Mann ( The Traitor's Contract ) places the action in Bombay, India, where its hero, half-Indian, half-English Inspector George Sansi, is the definitive outsider. The case involves a multilated corpse found floating in a lake. Sansi has to tread carefully so as not to step on his superior's toes, and he must maneuver around the politicians who have an interest in quashing the investigation, which ultimately takes on international proportions. As if that weren't enough, he also finds himself brokering a deal between Bombay's two most powerful crime bosses to prevent open warfare. Although Mann's lush, existentially anguished writing at times resembles Raymond Chandler's, Sansi is better educated than Marlowe, less introspective and less inclined to womanizing, one-liners and violence. While the story, like its hero, is not quite as nihilistic as is usual in the genre, it nevertheless sticks to the noir tradition with a harrowing and memorable climax. Ad/promo; BOMC alternate.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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