As far as I am concerned, any book about a historic personage is a success when it can bring out the nuances of his/ her personality. If it highlights only the good parts, it is hagiography: if it emphasises only the bad parts, it is demonisation. This graphic novel about Indira Gandhi falls into the first category.
The politically astute people who grew up in the second half of the twentieth century know that Indira Gandhi was one of the towering world leaders. She was also one of the most controversial. Having become the Prime Minister of India at a relatively young age after the sudden demise of Lal Bahadur Sastri, she succeeded in consolidating her power within it to become the undisputed leader. She was successful in making India self-sufficient in food, winning a war against Pakistan (which resulted in the creation of Bangladesh), making India a nuclear power, thus establishing herself as a leader to be reckoned from the third world. But she also imposed the national emergency in India in 1975 (which continued for two years) during which many excesses were committed by the police and her partymen; she was the person who is alleged to have made nepotism a feature of the Congress Party; and it was during her tenure that the Sikh shrine of the Golden Temple in Amritsar was invaded by the army to flush out the separatists holed up there, damaging the shrine in the process - an act which resulted in her assassination, by her Sikh bodyguard.
This graphic novel, purportedly the biography of Ms. Gandhi, highlights the positives and glosses over the negatives of this highly polarisiing figure - so much so, that one feels it is written as a propaganda piece. The drawings are good, and the narrative flows smoothly: but sadly, it lacks depth and gives only one side of the picture. Certain devices like the people in the coffee shop debating about the merits and demerits of Indira's actions, I found rather inane. And the story does have huge gaps, where the narrative jumps over years with the "goofy speed of a silent movie" (to borrow from Stephen King).
This tale is framed under another story of a young girl called Indira Thapa (named after Ms. Gandhi), running around to find the "oral history" of her name. This, I felt, was the lamest of gimmicks. What was the need? Indira Gandhi's story by itself is colourful enough.