Kilima.com - an international online guide featuring Art, Film, History, Literature, Music, News and Travel...
 Location:  Home » Travel » Maximum City: Bombay Lost and Found  
Browse
Art
Film
History
Literature
Music
Travel
Books
Kindle Book Downloads
Magazines
CDs
MP3
Musical Instruments
DVDs
Unbox Video Downloads
VHS

Maximum City: Bombay Lost and Found

Maximum City: Bombay Lost and FoundAuthor: Suketu Mehta
Publisher: Vintage
Category: Book

List Price: $17.00
Buy Used: $3.46
as of 3/18/2010 14:20 EDT details
You Save: $13.54 (80%)

In Stock
Buy

New (38) Used (45) from $3.46

Seller: noah74
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 87 reviews
Sales Rank: 14,840

Media: Paperback
Pages: 560
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9
Dimensions (in): 7.9 x 5.2 x 1.1

ISBN: 0375703403
Dewey Decimal Number: 954.79205
EAN: 9780375703409
ASIN: 0375703403

Publication Date: September 27, 2005
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Tell A Friend
Add to Wishlist
Add to Wedding Registry
Add to Baby Registry
Bookmark and Share

Features:
   ISBN13: 9780375703409
   Condition: NEW
   Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

Also Available In:

   Paperback - Maximum City: Bombay Lost and Found
   Hardcover - Maximum City: Bombay Lost and Found
   Kindle Edition - Maximum City: Bombay Lost and Found
   Paperback - Maximum City: Bombay Lost and Found
   Paperback - Maximum City: Bombay Lost and Found (Export & Airside Only)
   Hardcover - Maximum City: Bombay Lost and Found

Similar Items:


Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
A native of Bombay, Suketu Mehta gives us an insider’s view of this stunning metropolis. He approaches the city from unexpected angles, taking us into the criminal underworld of rival Muslim and Hindu gangs; following the life of a bar dancer raised amid poverty and abuse; opening the door into the inner sanctums of Bollywood; and delving into the stories of the countless villagers who come in search of a better life and end up living on the sidewalks.


Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 87
1 2 3 4 5 6 ...18Next »



5 out of 5 stars Fascinating   October 4, 2004
Kat Bakhu (Albuquerque, NM United States)
83 out of 90 found this review helpful

It was with great delight when I found by accident this sizeable book on Bombaby. My delight only increased when I started to read. Suketu Metha was taking me into a world that I had long wondered about but had never been able to visit. His book, Maximum City, is easily the best book on 20th Century India that I have ever read.

It is not written as a typical travel book. The format is to take major aspects and dominant personalities of the city and give them each a detailed, richly woven chapter. You'll learn about the quirks and numerous pitfalls of Bombay housing and how the Renter's Act has made everything much much worse. You'll meet the head politician who seems to view Bombay as his personal fiefdom. You'll meet an amazing police detective who is unique on the police force in that he is the only one who won't take bribes, and you'll even sit in on a number of torture sessions of criminals. You'll meet a whole lot of people who kill people for hire, as well as members on police force who kill criminals because the courts didn't do their jobs of prosecuting them (that reality was drop jaw amazing). You'll meet some of the top women in the Bombay beer bar/sex scene, as well as an engineer who gave up a promising career to become a poet living on the Bombay footpaths. The list goes on.

As I read this book, I was amazed at the people that Metha got to agree to give him a good chunk of their time, allowing him to develop a vivid flesh and blood portrait. To top it off, he is an amazingly good writer, who has a great sense of humor (I guffawed out loud several times as I read this book) while casting an unblinking eye on filth and corruption so deep that you feel like you're going to choke on it.

Maximum City is truly a fascinating book to read. Anyone who is interested in either India or the phenomenon of the modern city can't help but love this book.



3 out of 5 stars Found some; lost some   December 28, 2006
Sheetal Bahl (New Delhi, India)
28 out of 31 found this review helpful

I actually agree with a lot of the reviews written on this book, especially in terms of the specifics they have captured on what works in this book and what does not. The purpose of this review thus is only to either reiterate the key points briefly, or to add a couple of new ones.

0. Context setting: I lived in Bombay for 6 years, hope to never live there again, but am fascinated by it, and can't read enough about it. I wasn't directly exposed to either the underbelly or the glamour of Bombay, but was definitely aware of it - something you can never avoid if you live there. My perspective is thus much more middle-class, which I think would be the broadest perspective on Bombay.

1. Bombay is a city begging to be written about, and despite the almost sudden rise in interest in writing about this city, there are still only a few one can really read, so Suketu's attempt is a welcome addition.

2. Suketa's heart in the right place, but his execution is confused. He clearly wants to capture the heart and soul of Bombay, but seems to be limited by his obvious journalistic and dispassionate style. At times the city gets the better of him and he lets go, but not often enough. This is in my opinion is the biggest drawback of the book - it's just stuck somewhere in between an extended non-fiction journal piece and a string of stories linked together by the theme of a city.

3. The book is way too long. Enough people have already pointed this out, so I won't belabour the point, but really, the obsession with writing about the Mafia is totally tedious. If that was what the book was intended to be about, I would have no complaints, but it wasn't, and I think it's unfair to devote half the book (directly or indirectly) to this subject.

4. The author is clearly star-struck (film stars, political stars, underworld stars, you-name-it stars), which biases the content in the book and makes it disproportionately and painfully heavy towards the warped un-reality that stars live in.

5. The depth of exploration of various subjects is clearly inconsistent, with some being ridiculously long (refer 3 above), and some painfully short. I am not sure whether that's because of the author's biases, or because of the information detail he was able to elicit on various subjects, but irrespective, it leads to some frustration.

In closing, let me state that I recognize that this review sounds harsh, but it is not really intended to be, and is just meant to prepare you for the long journey you will embark upon. In the end, all the above notwithstanding, I would still recommend this book as a second or third one if you want to get to know, and I mean really know, Bombay. My unequivocal first choice remains Shantaram, a book which never misses the pulse of the city in its much longer 1000 page journey, and remains the ultimate paean to Bombay.



4 out of 5 stars "Bombay Nightmares" Explicitly Revealed, Intriguing Portrait   October 31, 2004
Ed Uyeshima (San Francisco, CA USA)
21 out of 23 found this review helpful

As a neophyte traveler to India planning my itinerary a few years back, I chose to limit myself to the Grand Trunk Road and at the time had regrets about having to bypass Bombay. According to author Suketu Mehta, it looks like my decision may have been inadvertently wise. His portrayal of this megalopolis and its inhabitants is fulsome but frequently bleak and sometimes stultifying. He offers an insider's view of Bombay in a way that makes you feel you are experiencing all dimensions of it, no small feat for a city that contains 18 million people. Of course, some of the details are on the sketchy side, but frankly the city is so overwhelming, I don't mind some of the book's more cursory aspects. After all, Mehta has the daunting task of encompassing the gang wars, the corruption, the poverty and the prolific industry known worldwide as "Bollywood" into a single tome.

The author paints an almost surreal picture of urban life there, but through his determined and often risky investigations, he is also intent on showing the layers underneath to provide the typical outsider a more comprehensive understanding of how Bombay has become so out of control. Mehta is particularly riveting when interviewing the rioters and hit men on both sides of the long-standing Hindu-Muslim divide that peaked with extreme violence in the early nineties. Promising to put their lives in the movies, the author extracts brutal yet fascinating confessions from people who murder for a living and trust no one. The tactic seems questionable, but the resulting confessionals are worthwhile. The other high point of the book is his first-hand account of the Indian film industry. Since Mehta himself is a screenwriter for a film highlighted in the book, "Mission Kashmir", he is able to extract some interesting perspectives, including his own, on the filmmaking process and the surrounding business and politics.

I would imagine a lot of what he writes will not be popular with native Mumbaikars (as they are known especially since the city's name changed officially to Mumbai in 1996), but it certainly feels real, especially as he expresses outrage at the tightening grip of the underworld bosses controlling much of the wealth of the city. In particular, Mehta paints an incisive portrait of Bal Thackeray, the city's uncrowned king who exercises unwarranted levels of power and influence through his political acumen and questionable ethics. Just by the startling revelations he gets, it's obvious the author is incurring a great deal of risk by uncovering Thackeray in this journalistic manner. At the same time, Bombay holds a strange fascination over anyone interested in Indian culture, and Mehta's writing will certainly satisfy those in need of his amazing insight. Despite all the travesties there, I actually never questioned Mehta's admiration for the city and those who survive living there day after day. So order up some vadapav and a masala Coke and be prepared for a dark journey. Needless to say, this is no Lonely Planet guide. Fascinating reading.



4 out of 5 stars Too Much of a Town That's Too Much   June 12, 2005
doomsdayer520 (Pennsylvania)
13 out of 13 found this review helpful

This is definitely not a tourist guide to the sunny and acceptable side of the teeming and monstrous city of Bombay. Suketu Mehta, an American transplant, decided to return to his hometown and investigate its endless and often horrific underbelly - the world that the vast majority of its inhabitants have learned to live in. Underlying Mehta's general coverage of poverty, overcrowding, crime, ethnic conflict, and black market economics are in-depth character sketches of people surviving the dark side of Bombay. My favorite portion of the book covers Mehta's time with a forlorn exotic dancer that he calls Monalisa, while he also delves deeply into the lives of crime lords, street thugs, a harried police detective, a budding poet living on the streets, and even a family of Jain monks, all of whom have stories that would rarely if ever be told in more upscale narratives. This all makes the book unexpectedly harsh, vulgar, violent, and surprisingly fascinating from a human point of view.

The only problem is that Mehta doesn't know when to stop, over-covering his subjects to the point of exhaustion, and occasionally going off on unfocused tangents, such as the story of his involvement in producing a cheesy Bollywood movie. The book mostly managed to keep me interested through all its 500+ pages, as Metha would eventually introduce intriguing new people or situations. But each chapter is usually way too long in itself, and sometimes it feels like the book will never end as you long for Mehta to wrap up one story and either get to the next or just bring the book to an authoritative conclusion. Mehta has created a highly intriguing book about an overwhelming city that would scare away the weak-hearted, but his prose tends to get overwhelming too. [~doomsdayer520~]



3 out of 5 stars Good but in need of crisp editing   November 17, 2005
Vijay K. Gurbani (Lisle, IL United States)
11 out of 11 found this review helpful

The book promised an exploratory anticipation of Bombay, India's commercial capital. This book promised to peel the layers of the city and reveal the real Bombay. And it did that to a great extent. You learn about the underworld and how vast their influence is. In India, the underworld is funded not much through selling drugs as it is through what an Indian would pay a mafia don to exact swift justice or have the don get the municipality to fix a pothole. Indian courts are backlogged to the tune of dozens of years. Getting justice through the penal system means waiting decades for a verdict that may not even favor you! So the quick way out is the underworld. The book is best when it traces the underworld's arch as it crosses the Indian Police Service, the Indian Penal System, Bollywood, the larger Indian bureaucracy that one has to wade through to get anything done in the country, and the communal divide between the Hindus and Muslims. The book bogs down when it tries to look too deeply at other social ills like Bombay dance bar girls and their private lives. The last chapter of the book appears to have been added simply to pad the number of pages; it describes in detail the journey of one Jain family as it renounces the commercial world in search for a spiritual one. While marginally interesting, I had no idea what this had to do with discovering the city itself. Portions of the book could do with some crisp editing, especially the latter half of the book.

Showing reviews 1-5 of 87
1 2 3 4 5 6 ...18Next »


In Stock
Buy

bollywood  bombay  india  mumbai  suketu mehta  
CERTAIN CONTENT THAT APPEARS ON THIS SITE COMES FROM AMAZON SERVICES LLC. THIS CONTENT IS PROVIDED ‘AS IS’ AND IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE OR REMOVAL AT ANY TIME.

Rare and Antiquarian 468x60

  Kilima.com in association with Amazon.com. Powered by Associate-O-Matic. Flags courtesy of 3dflags.com.

Copyright © 1996 - 2010 Kilima.com

Kilima.com Info...
About Kilima.com
Ordering & Shipping
Kilima.com Archive
Contact Kilima.com