Opinions, Quotes and Comments by Eminent People on The Great Indian Novel
24/February/2014

"Nothing [can] prepare us for the breathtaking quality of its brilliance.... [R]everberates with wit and the author's obvious delight in writing it.... Shashi Tharoor has indeed written the Great Indian Novel."

Sunday Mid-Day, Bombay

"At long last I have come across a novel written by an Indian which justifies its title. Although its author starts with a disclaimer that his work may not be regarded as great, Indian or even a novel, it is all these. The Great Indian Novel puts Shashi Tharoor... in the front rank of contemporary Indian writers."

– Khushwant SinghSunday, Calcutta

To call it brilliant, engaging, impressive or vastly enjoyable... would still seem to underestimate the novel's achievement...A magnificent Indian novel."

India Abroad, New York

"It is amazing how well [the author] succeeds.... When a book threatens to penetrate one's veneer of complacency and idea-rigidity, it is proper to gently genuflect to it...This novel is an astonishing achievement, deserving unreserved kudos."

P. LalThe Telegraph, Calcutta

"An outrageous feast, spilling over with myths, rhymes, tales of ancient treachery and wisdom, and tales of modern foolishness and heroism... An ambitious and often eloquent retelling of India's recent history... [with] modern and ancient drama woven into this wildly original extravaganza.... Combining creativity with scholarship, the author... uses his skill as a stylist... to humanize both historical and mythological figures. We need no special knowledge of India to find Tharoor's book fascinating.... The period of British rule is for him a fitting target for both hilarious lampoons and impassioned frontal assaults.... This feast of a book... will appeal to many diverse tastes.... The prodigious scope of [Tharoor's] knowledge matches his formidable stylistic talent."

– Edward HowerThe Chicago Tribune 

"Shashi Tharoor's brilliantly written book... merits to be called a classic."

– The Hindu, Madras

"The young Indian writer Shashi Tharoor's ambitious first novel is at once a parody of the Mahabharata and an act of homage that retells it in terms of 20th century Indian history.... Mr Tharoor's attitude is best captured by the self-deprecating playfulness of his title.... He's undertaken as well a parody of British writing about India.... Nearly all of this is ingenious and some of it is inspired."

– Michael GorraThe New York Times Book Review 

"[A] publishing event....There are few recent publications which one will enjoy reading as much as Shashi Tharoor's The Great Indian Novel.... The book's historical and philosophical perspective places it well above, though not outside, the category of a 'good read'.... A brilliant concept, well executed and [with] something in it for everyone."

India, meet World; World, India! by Shrey Goyal, The Northeast Today
23 September, 2012

The college student does not want to know if the MEA has started engaging with Tony Abbott’s administration. Why would a fisherman care about the country’s relationship with SAARC? Or a housewife about India’s strategic objectives in Africa? Unless the man happens to be running a small business in Siliguri.Or the student is looking to pursue graduate school in Australia. Or the fisherman’s family lives in constant fear of accidentally entering someone else’s territorial waters and facing dire consequences. Even the housewife, juggling bills for fuel and food, is not left untouched by it all.

Shashi Tharoor’s most recent book, Pax Indica, explains why foreign policy matters for a country like India, and outlines how it could very well be a powerful instrument for her own domestic transformation. Beautifully written, Pax Indicais evocative of an engaging and exciting conversation which, while dotted with tongue-in-cheek anecdotes, misses neither the historical context nor the intricacies of the topic at hand.

In fact, it is important to point out the shades which the author has painted the work in. While Tharoor remains a celebrated scholar in the international relations space, this is not an academic work, but is instead meant to be read and understood by a plethora of readers, from the non-fiction aficionado high-scholar to the geopolitically-inclined enthusiasts. Another interesting amalgamation is that of Tharoor the former UN Under-Secretary General and Tharoor the MP for Thiruvananthapuram, both of whom can be seen and heard.

Pax Indica opens a window to the inner workings of the MEA and other domestic stakeholders in India’s dialogue with the rest of the world. The book also examines these links with different partners in some detail as well. The strategic approach taken by India, especially during the Nehruvian era, is showcased and reflected upon, and helps trace an outline of India’s identity and unique position in the world as a thought leader and as an emblem for self-righteousness and peaceful coexistence.

India’s unique challenges in grasping contemporary matters of flaunting soft power and public diplomacy are also discussed. It is extremely disconcerting for Tharoor as it is for the reader to see the persistence of infrastructural and logistical challenges plaguing India’s foreign policy, such as the understaffed diplomatic corps, the lack of structure, coordination, and personnel planning, and the absence of informed public debates, although the latter has seen some initiative in recent years.

Particularly noteworthy is the chapter on the complexities of living in ‘A Tough Neighbourhood’. India’s leviathan bulk and the sensitivity by which it is obliged to handle matters in the South Asian region make it the proverbial elephant in the room not only in terms of magnitude, but also due to the sheer awkwardness of conduct. Tharoor also laments the decline of the north-eastern states of India, which had a higher per capita income than most of the rest of the nation in 1947, but have since been “the stepchildren of India’s development,” cut-off from the heartland and suffering as a result of poor integration with Bangladesh.

The north-east comes up once again, as Tharoor demonstrates his central thesis that foreign policy, while focused outward, can bring much benefit to domestic populaces. The region can in fact, be thought of to be occupying prime real estate due to its significance not just for international relations but for commerce and tourism. Indeed, the north-east of India can act as a bridge for south Asian integration, linking two economically rich expanses of the continent. The wealth of the region in terms of biodiversity, cultural diversity, energy and mineral resources, and the human resource potential, is vast and waiting to be developed and tapped. India’s ‘Look East’ policy, can thus only be fully appreciated if the seven sisters states, each of whom has a long international border, are developed and revamped to avail of the economic consequences of our new-found kinship.

The book ends with a reminder of this nation’s sovereignty and independence of thought, and calls for realisation of a grand strategy involving a multi-aligned approach and playing a leadership role in shaping of the new world order. This leadership role is not about domination or superpower politics, but rather about a sense of responsibility in instilling global cooperation. A sense of peace that India can bring to the world. Pax Indica.

Shrey Goyal is based in New Delhi, and is the editor for MInd: The Mensa India magazine. He can be contacted at me@shreygoyal.com

See more at: http://tntmagazine.in/reviews/india-meet-world-world-india/#sthash.95ssGiu5.dpuf
-->