`An important debut. Brilliant, with an authentic ?desi? touch. A must read.? ? Surender Mohan Pathak `Flavourful as butter chicken, as unputdownable as a Patiala peg.? ? Samrat Choudhury, author of The Urban Jungle Book `This brilliantly crafted noir thriller gets everything right from the determined detective to the femme fatales. It keeps you entertained as you zig and zag through the plot, feel nervous excitement during the twists, fall in love with the characters, and laugh your butts off at the funnies.? ? Jugal Mody, author of Toke `A thriller set in the Visa Section? Against all the odds, it works. Absurd fun, but with an authentic taste of India too. A bit uncharitable about the cricket team though.? ? Simon `Bruce? Denyer, author of Rogue Elephant `An electrifying thriller debut? ? Mint Lounge Dominic `Biscuit? McLeod is an expert in making the best of a bad situation. As a visa fraud investigator at the Australian High Commission, New Delhi, Biscuit is legendary for his prowess in drinking beer, playing cricket, and swearing like a Dilliwallah, until the tragic death of a junior colleague forces him to become something else ? a conspiracy theorist who can?t let go. Armed only with a hangover, a loathing for authority, and an inability to believe the lies that he is being told, Biscuit stumbles from crisis to catastrophe in a shambolic search for the truth. From the villages of Punjab to the cricket fields of Delhi, and the walled compounds of Gurgaon and Chanakyapuri, with dodgy visa agents, crooked cops, Aussie journalists, Afghani pimps and American spies for company, it looks like Biscuit will never solve the case, or leave the party early. A bold, comic debut, The Sad Demise of Manpreet Singh is a novel about the things people will do to leave the places they don?t want to be ? and the lengths others will go to try and stop them.'
Patrick Bryson is a writer, runner, musician and cricket tragic who lives and works in New Delhi. His short stories and essays have appeared in Southerly, Tehelka, The Lifted Brow, The Times Of India, Motherland, Out of Print, The Shillong Times and Mascara Literary Review. He was awarded his PhD in Creative Writing from the University of Newcastle, Australia in 2009. His first novel, published in 2014, is The Sad Demise Of Manpreet Singh.
This book is not your conventional book which can be slotted into a regular genre nor is the protagonist Dominic 'Biscuit' McLeod (Dom) your conventional hero.
The narrative takes us readers through Dom's investigation into the death of one of his colleagues and he happens to stumble upon a large scale visa fraud and human trafficking scandal involving more than quite a few of his colleagues and friends from the diplomatic community of various embassies and commissions in New Delhi.
Whether his efforts to bring the scandal to light and the deliver justice to the culprits forms the crux of the book. However, what is more interesting is the journey that Dom takes and Dom's personality by itself which to me was the real highlight of the book.
Read this if you are looking for a deceptively interesting yet unconventional book.