Neither a fan-boy account, nor is it a critique of actor's life and his choices. The author sets up the entire scene in front of us, in a very vivid form yet not attaching his own emotions, his own thoughts or conclusions to it. That makes the chapters even more engaging. The book takes us on a journey from the known face Sanjay Dutt to a more soft person, that only someone who heavily researched on the star would know; – starting from his parents, how they met, sanjay’s birth, his adolescence, boarding school, the time he smuggled heroin into the United States and went on a drunken shooting spree at his Pali Hill home after his break-up with Tina Munim to his curious phone calls to gangster Chhota Shakeel ,is embroilment in the 1993 Mumbai serial blasts, memorable Munnabhai MBBS – and the exile that ultimately made him a reformed goon. But one thing is for certain: there will never be another Sanjay Dutt, a simple straight shooter in an image obsessed Bollywood. And by the time you finish reading the book, the bad boy, will turn good in your head, because just as Yasser Usman mentioned in his introduction: “he (Sanjay) is unhesitatingly honest and forthright about his mistakes and goof-ups. Unlike most film stars, Sanjay has always been an open book”.
The author has crafted a beautiful life story by piecing together a narrative based on interviews of film industry insiders, police staff, lawyers, archivists, etc which is captivating and manages to hold the reader's attention. However, it mostly says what is already known to the world and it is like the author merged it all together in form of a book without much ‘untold material involved’. I judged the book by its title. I couldn’t have been more wrong. Neither was it ‘untold’, nor was it the story of a ‘bad boy’. Nonetheless, it was captivating and an informative read; thus ‘twas worth the time!