I like reading books across different genres that bring the reader into other cultures and times The way a writer recreates the atmosphere of a society through events that occur, or have occurred in the past to shape the present, and the thoughts and beliefs that the characters hold are, for me, critical to the making of a good story. A good example of this would be the Number One Ladies Detective Agency series by Alexander McCall Smith or the Aurelio Zen series by Michael Dibden.
By all rights I should have abandoned this book after the first 50 pages. The syntax was frequently annoying (I am not one to shy away from narrative that has to be worked at - I will read Kipling or Conrad and navigate the often archaic nautical descriptive), and at first I wondered if this was just poor translation or gratuitous nuance. But more of a problem for me was that the rich Indian culture was barely touched upon, and the characters seemed flat and uninteresting.
This was the first Ghote I have read. Perhaps I would have benefitted from having had prior exposure to the character and the authors writing.