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BOOK SUMMARY
'I used to be human once. So I'm told. I don't remember it myself, but people who knew me when I was small say I walked on two feet just like a human being...'

Ever since he can remember, Animal has gone on all fours, the catastrophic result of what happened on That Night when, thanks to an American chemical company, the Apocalypse visited his slum.

Now not quite twenty, he leads a hand-to-mouth existence with his dog Jara and a crazy old nun called Ma Franci, and spends his nights fantasising about Nisha, the daughter of a local musician, and wondering what it must be like to get laid. More...
 
REVIEWS IN BRIEF
From the arresting opening line of Indra Sinha's vivid second novel ("I used to be human once"), the voice of Animal, the narrator, leaps out to grab you by the throat. Bawdy, irreverent and smart… Animal's People - part coming-of-age Bildungsroman, part vicious critique of corporate terrorism - is a bold and punchy tale.
New Statesman

Every now and then you come across a novel so honest that it leaves you gasping for breath - like a blow to the solar plexus. The emotion is raw, the story honest and the language simply that of the people. You know that once you start reading it will break your heart and yet you keep turning the pages because the story has to be told. Indian Express

Many of you have read Indra's pieces on bhopal.net, the 777 newsletters and scores of campaign material he has produced in the last fourteen years. imagine all of that anger, sadness, laughter, bawdiness, absurdity and flights of power defying imagination in one book - thats Animal's People. It is an intimately gripping story told by 'Animal' a young survivor of the 'apokalis' [apocalypse] in the city of Khaufpur. Everybody calls him Animal because he lopes on his feet and hands due to his bent spine - damage caused by the gases of the apokalis. He lies, cheats, peeps at bathing women, thinks unprintable thoughts, dreams wet dreams, verges on betraying the cause for justice but throughout remains starkly real and immensely lovable. The people around Animal are fellow survivors, activists, American do gooders, musicians, government officials, lumpens and lust objects. Together it is the story of the have-nothings fighting the have-alls and winning. Khaufpur is as close or far from Bhopal as you want it to be but I am sure you will enjoy the retelling of the many campaigns that all of you have been part of and recognise the intricacies of wickedness and resistance in a gassed city. For sure it has the power to make a whole new set of people curious and potentially sympathetic to the ongoing struggle of Bhopal. The book is published in England and available on Amazon UK . Please forward this and encourage friends to buy this brilliant book.
Sathyu Sarangi, International Campaign for Justice in Bhopal
 

"Bhalu, call this story fiction if you want, but you must tell it because it is true, and its heart is that murder of forty years ago which people in India still remember..."
     The reverberations from the notorious Nanavati society murder in 1950s Bombay – the fatal consequences of an affair between an Indian playboy and his married English lover – were so great they reached the offices of Prime Minister Nehru and irrevocably changed the face of the Indian justice system.
     In modern-day London, Bhalu unexpectedly meets Phoebe, forty years after their idyllic childhood in India, and just as Bhalu is beginning to explore a mystery left him by his dying mother. More...

 
REVIEWS IN BRIEF

Best ever evocation of Bombay and Ghats
Reviewer: Fred Gomes from New York City, USA

As someone who grew up in Bombay I have to say that this is the only novel I have ever read that brings back to me the city that I knew, its sounds, smells and above all, the feel of being there. From bus rides on the 132, smells of Sassoon Dock, reminders of the great days of Hindi movies (Guru Dutt, Johnny Walker) to parts of the city like Dongri which are never written about elsewhere because only a person who knows can write: this plus a great story and characters and what must be the definitive description of the western ghats through the eyes of a small child make this a novel that haunts one long after one has finished the last page and regretfully put it down.

Indiaclub.com

I thoroughly enjoyed this first novel by Sinha and hope that there is more to follow. It made me both laugh and cry and so absorbed me that I even got up at dawn one morning to watch the sun rise over Whitby Bay and finish the book! Just what you need to while away the hours on a hot beach in North Yorkshire!
Londonlibraries.org

One death, long ago, stains the innocence of the present with the pus of ancient corruption. It is a search for truth, rather than revenge, that drives the story, but it proves to be a truth that brings no release. India is evoked with astonishing richness and depth, while remaing a backdrop for the characters, who are vivid and rounded, but always with more to reveal as the dream draws them on. I read this book some months ago, but it haunts me still.
Andy, Melbourne

 
 
 
 
 
Cybergypsies are the pioneers who opened up cyberspace. The author describes the curious and often bizarre people he met over fifteen years of roaming the pre-web net: virus writers, hackers, sex-peddlars, conmen... He nearly lost everything through his obsession, but also discovered how the net can be used for campaigns for human rights and justice. More...
 
REVIEWS IN BRIEF
Experience is equally "real," whether online or in the flesh. While the blurring of reality and illusion is not a new theme, Sinha's rich narrative and thoughtful observations propel this engaging memoir.
Time Magazine
 

Narrated with wit and moments of literary flair in the nonlinear style of the internet itself, this book amounts to a sort of architectural dig, excavating bits of data and random-access memories from "that peculiar world of ours which has all but vanished"
Publishers Weekly

 
The world that envelopes Bear seems borrowed from the pages of Tolkien's The Hobbit; other times it's as if the author has unlocked a door in Lewis' Chronicles of Narnia. Bear's fantastical band of pranksters includes a hacker in Oklahoma named Geno Paris (his real name); a femme fatale called Calypso who robs men of their money, and even leads one to suicide; and Luna, a disembodied woman whose real identity is never known, but who enchants Bear because she has completely given herself over to the online life.
Industry Standard
 
A strangely fascinating exploration of the dark side of cyberspace, where virus writers, porno peddlers, and fantasy game fanatics have created an anarchic subculture that blurs reality and imagination... Part Dante, part Bill Gates, part Jack Kerouac however you categorize this bizarre book, it's worthy of attention.
Kirkus Reviews
 
The Cybergypsies is a page-turner that left me exhilerated, sated and wiser. Balu, you are indeed a love god. Bomshanka.
Amazon.com reader
 
 
 
 

"The best single source of information connecting tantra with gnosticism I have have ever seen and the best single collection of Indian erotica I have ever seen." Reader on Amazon

The book publishes a number of important, never-before-seen tantric paintings from a private collection.

The text, written over six weeks in 1992, in the pre-Google era, was the product of two decades of reading of original texts, but no "hands on" experience.

 
SAMPLE SPREADS
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REVIEWS IN BRIEF
"The best single source of information connecting tantra with gnosticism I have have ever seen and the best single collection of indian erotica I have ever seen." Amazon reader review
 

"Tantrism prescribes a systematic violation of all that the culture within which it is embedded holds most dear: a destruction or suspension of values in an affirmation of desire and the body. The Guhyasama Tantra provides one of the most extreme examples, simply by inverting or negating the strictest tenets of Buddhism: "Kill all living beings, let your words be lies, take what is not given, and enjoy the ladies." After quoting that passage, Indra Sinha goes on to summarize the passages that follow: The text "suggests that the sadhaka should take a radiantly lovely sixteen- year old girl, scent her with perfumes and deck her with ornaments, and then have intercourse with her, worshipping her [as an embodiment of shakti] with, and offering to the gods, the four essences of his body: excrement, urine, semen, and blood: if he does this, he will become the equal of a buddha." With absolute systematicity, then, Tantrism becomes a celebration of the obscene and despised, and what is above all obscene and despised is whatever reminds us of the body."

Tantrické praktiky v hinduistické tradici pokládají sexuální energii za cestu k dosazšení duchovní moudrosti. Po dobu více nezš dvou tisíc let vznikalo v Indii velké mnozšství erotické literatury. Na základeš mnoha tešchto dešl sestavil autor tuto knihu, kterou doprovází jedinecšná sbírka obrazuž. Blurb for the Czech edition. I have no idea what it means

 
 
 
 
 
 

The first new English translation of the Kama Sutra to be published in the west for nearly 100 years - it was preceded only by the 1888 translation of Burton and Arbuthnot.

This translation was published in 1980 and is the famous version whose chapter on lovemaking positions was pirated in the early 1990s and has now spread right across the internet.

It has been in print continuously for almost thirty years and has been re-translated into languages as obscure as Brazilian Portuguese and Finnish. More...

 
COVER IMAGES
All cover images of my books on this website are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 License. Basically this means that if unaltered they may be used freely for any non-commercial purpose.