Synopses & Reviews
Review
"This book tells us that we all have two deaths: when we die and when we are forgotten. But there is a possibility of two births, the second being re-created in an extraordinary book. This is one of those rare books that bring people alive again. It has been written with imagination and is engrossing to read." Ian Critchley Sunday Times
Review
"Like a superior commander himself, Karnad marshals and orders a huge range of materials, locations, and actions with apparently effortless skill, making everything cohere not only through a galloping and affecting narrative but, crucially, through a passionate moral core that repeatedly exposes the numerous ways in which Indians were treated as fodder by the Empire.... The writing of history intersects gloriously with several other genres in this moving, eloquent, intelligent work." Neel Mukherjee
Review
"From the very first page it is the brilliance of the writing that stands out.... It has the stamp of imaginative truth about it, and we can ask nothing more of any kind of writing." Financial Times
Review
"[S]pectacular.... In prose that verges at times on poetry, he writes with the imaginative gift of a first-rate novelist in order to deliver the truth. Romance and the attendant grief of loss permeate the book alongside passages that are unexpectedly moving.... Unforgettable." David Crane Spectator
Review
"[Karnad's] fascinating [book] is both a poignant memorial to his lost family and a gripping account of how India contributed to the allied victory and sowed the seeds of its independence." Juliet Nicolson Daily Telegraph
Synopsis
A brilliantly conceived nonfiction epic, a war narrated through the lives and deaths of a single family.
Synopsis
The photographs of three young men had stood in his grandmother s house for as long as he could remember, beheld but never fully noticed. They had all fought in the Second World War, a fact that surprised him. Indians had never figured in his idea of the war, nor the war in his idea of India. One of them, Bobby, even looked a bit like him, but Raghu Karnad had not noticed until he was the same age as they were in their photo frames. Then he learned about the Parsi boy from the sleepy south Indian coast, so eager to follow his brothers-in-law into the colonial forces and onto the front line. Manek, dashing and confident, was a pilot with India s fledgling air force; gentle Ganny became an army doctor in the arid North-West Frontier. Bobby s pursuit would carry him as far as the deserts of Iraq and the green hell of the Burma battlefront.
The years 1939 45 might be the most revered, deplored, and replayed in modern history. Yet India s extraordinary role has been concealed, from itself and from the world. In riveting prose, Karnad retrieves the story of a single family a story of love, rebellion, loyalty, and uncertainty and with it, the greater revelation that is India s Second World War.
Farthest Field narrates the lost epic of India s war, in which the largest volunteer army in history fought for the British Empire, even as its countrymen fought to be free of it. It carries us from Madras to Peshawar, Egypt to Burma unfolding the saga of a young family amazed by their swiftly changing world and swept up in its violence.
"
About the Author
Born in Mumbai, India, Raghu Karnad studied at Swarthmore College and at Oxford, where he took a first. His journalism has won prizes in India and in Europe, and he has served as the editor of Time Out Delhi. His writing has appeared in the Financial Times and n+1, among other publications. He lives in Bangalore.