Hugo Baumgartner, the son of a Jewish merchant, was born and raised in Berlin. They lived in affluence as his father's trade was booming. Then the unthinkable Holocaust happens forcing them to lose all their properties during which his father dies. The entire property of his father was slowly seized by his dad's business associate (they addressed him the 'Gentleman from Hamburg') who, posing as if helping the family in grief, somehow manages to beguile and gulp the whole fortune to himself. He tells Hugo to go to India, as Germany is no more safe for Jews, and that he would put a word about him to his business partner in India (he has contacts). Hugo decides to go and live in India whereas his fragile mother refuses to come to "the land of snakes and beggars." So, he set out for himself and plans of returning once things were normal in Germany, as the 'Gentleman from Hamburg' assures that he would take care of Hugo's mother.
Hugo goes to India and lands in Calcutta. It was the time when Germany and England locks horns (WWII). Hugo was arrested and sent to a concentration camp being mistaken to be a Nazi, wherein his repeated attempts to prove that he was but a Jew born and brought up in Berlin, came to naught. He accepts the fate and starts to enjoy the routine life in the camp for 6 years. In all this time, he had been writing letters to his mother, and received no reply. He was afraid that perchance his mother would have been caught by the Nazis.
After he was released from the camp, he goes to meet the person he was supposed to meet in India: Mr. Habibullah. Unfortunately, the latter was broke and was in a situation where he was forced to leave Calcutta for Dacca because of the Hindu-Muslim clashes in Bengal back then. Mr. Habibullah advices Baumgartner to go to Bombay and meet Mr. Chimanlal. In a riot, it appeared that Habibullah's shop was looted and he was possibly killed. So, Hugo leaves for Bombay, meets the generous and kind Chimanlal who helps Hugo much. With Chimanlal, Hugo forms somehow a deeper relationship than that of employee-employer, and accompanies the former in his horse race moments, which obviously is considered bad by the former's family. So, whatever silver cups they won together by betting, Chimanlal gave Hugo to keep and that someday they would share it. In the meantime, Chimanlal dies and his son takes over his business, thus forcing Hugo jobless because Hugo has had no bonding and business papers with Chimanlal.
He resorts to live secludedly with stray cats in Bombay. His only companion was a fellow "coarse German" named Lotte who was once a bar dancer.
One day Baumgartner takes a drugged foreigner to his home because the latter happened to be penniless to pay the bill for what he had eaten and refused to move out of Café de Paris, the restaurant to which Hugo was a regular customer. The restauranteur had pleaded Hugo to go and speak to the homeless "firinghi" and ask him to get out. Hugo was in a constrain because it is only this restuarant that provides leftover food and milk for his cats for free everyday. So, he spoke to the guy in German. As the latter refused, Hugo, in the spur of the moment, offers to take the homeless to his home.
This man, wild and dominant in nature, comes to Hugo's home and eyes the silver cups. What happened then is the closing scene.
The final chapter of the novel is meticulously written. Human emotions during panic, and confusion, especially in a city like Bombay, was so neatly pictured. The whole story was deeply soaked in humanity, the hidden devils and gods within. It is about alienation, abject condition, perspective of people, hapless nature of a common man. There were Historical references to World War II and its consequences; that how it affected the lives of ordinary, powerless people.
It is interesting and astonishing to note that you can forge a wonderful fiction out of a failure; a total nobody, in contrast to the well-equipped, or clever, or intrepid and adventurous, or charming type of protagonists whom we are so accustomed as well as bored of seeing.
A lovely, lovely read.