I am not giving this a rating because I have not read this book properly. Instead I ducked and dived, taking titbits from here and there, and skim reading large tracts of it.
The scope of the book is vast - the history, religions, geography and politics of India, yet it is a slim volume at a mere 215 pages.
But.....but, I think it is excellent. I am someone who has got rather fed up with wading through the dense and lengthy explanations to be found on Wikipedia - and in many ways this book is the perfect alternative. An easy to access, easy to read guidebook for anyone interested in getting a broad picture of India. Want to know more about the Sikhs, or the period of British rule, or Nehru? It is all there as a series of synopses that are easy to read and understand.
My one complaint? The author dwells far too long on religion for my tastes - there are 70 pages describing the various religions of India. This may be because they are intrinsic to the identity of the people of India, a bedrock upon which different Indian cultures emerge, but it was for me rather onerous reading.
Nevertheless I am going to keep this book, and I speak as someone who rarely keeps books. I think it will make a simple reference source that I can dip into time and time again.
I wondered about the credentials of the author. The paperback I have is rather crudely produced, and the cover looks more like the cover of a cheap school textbook rather than one which is a serious authority on its subject. The dreaded Wikipedia tells me he was a novelist, lawyer, politician and journalist - editor of several literary and news magazines, and two newspapers. He lived from 1915 - 2014. He was also the recipient of Padma Vibhushan, the second-highest civilian award in India. I found all of this reassuring, certainly the book suggests he knew what he was talking about.
So, all in all - for me - this is an excellent reference book, rather than something I would recommend to be read all of a piece from beginning to end.