Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Wyndham & Banerjee #4

Death in the East

Rate this book
1905, London. As a young constable, Sam Wyndham is on his usual East London beat when he comes across an old flame, Bessie Drummond, attacked in the streets. The next day, when Bessie is found brutally beaten in her own room, locked from the inside, Wyndham promises to get to the bottom of her murder. But the case will cost the young constable more than he ever imagined.

1922, India. Leaving Calcutta, Captain Sam Wyndham heads for the hills of Assam, to the ashram of a sainted monk where he hopes to conquer his opium addiction. But when he arrives, he sees a ghost from his life in London – a man thought to be long dead, a man Wyndham hoped he would never see again.

Wyndham knows he must call his friend and colleague Sergeant Banerjee for help. He is certain this figure from his past isn’t here by coincidence. He is here for revenge . . .

384 pages, Paperback

First published November 14, 2019

352 people are currently reading
2020 people want to read

About the author

Abir Mukherjee

11 books1,320 followers
Abir Mukherjee is the Times bestselling author of the Sam Wyndham series of crime novels set in Raj era India. His debut, A Rising Man, won the CWA Endeavour Dagger for best historical crime novel of 2017 and was shortlisted for the MWA Edgar for best novel. His second novel, A Necessary Evil, won the Wilbur Smith Award for Adventure Writing and was a Zoe Ball Book Club pick. His third novel, Smoke and Ashes, was chosen by the Sunday Times as one of the 100 Best Crime & Thriller Novels since 1945. Abir grew up in Scotland and now lives in London with his wife and two sons.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
1,916 (42%)
4 stars
1,918 (42%)
3 stars
551 (12%)
2 stars
72 (1%)
1 star
15 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 582 reviews
Profile Image for Paromjit.
3,080 reviews26.3k followers
October 30, 2019
A brilliant addition to Abir Mukherjee's terrific Captain Sam Wyndham historical series set in the turbulent social and political times of an India struggling to throw off the yoke of British colonial rule in the early 1920s. Here we have a narrative that shifts back and forth in time to 1905, to a younger Sam, a police constable stationed at Whitechapel in London's East End. In 1922, Wyndham is in the grip of an opium addiction that he is finally forced to deal with and on the advice of his doctor, he arrives in Assam seeking treatment at a ashram, run by a Hindu holy man and monks, that is known to have some success in dealing with addictions. Sam knows he is going to have to go through hell and he must succeed, they offer only the one opportunity to kick the habit. At the railway station he is startled when he sees a ghost from his past that surely could not be. It is this that brings back his memories of London and Bessie Drummond, a woman he didn't treat well, attacked and later murdered in a locked room within her own home.

This is a East End with its latest influx of Jewish refugees and immigrants, offending English sensibilities by having the nerve to look like one of them. There is anti-immigrant hysteria, whipped up the press, based on blind prejudice, stereotypes and blatant lies. This part of London is desperately impoverished, with its powerful crime brothers, Martin and Wesley Spiller, that locals live in fear of. Initially, the prime suspect is Bessie's violent brute of a husband, but suspicion goes on to fall on a Jewish suspect. Sam harbours doubts but is unable to prevent a terrible miscarriage of justice. In India, Sam finds himself surrounded by an international group of white men looking to throw off their addictions, including the kind and compassionate Jewish Jacob Adler, suffering from a cancerous tumour. Sam becomes drawn to the beautiful Emily Carter who volunteers at the ashram, the wife of the rich and powerful Ronald Carter, who appears to own everything and the premier person of influence in Jatinga, a leading light of the all white British Jatinga Club. Events lead to the arrival of Sergeant Banerjee, leading a possible murder inquiry in a case that is intertwined and connected with Sam and what happened in London in 1905.

This is a atmospheric, beautifully written historical mystery, with a other worldly location in Jatinga, with its ashram, the shocking raining down of suicide birds, fakirs, a place rumoured to be cursed and evil, abounding with passion and rivalries. The British with their petty hierarchies, hypocrisies, and insistence on segregation from the natives, are determined to put down any resistance to their exploitative and murderous rule. They overflow with their unbearable sense of entitlement, the rock solid certainty in their superiority, racist and abusive with a casual and thoughtless abandon. What makes this addition to the series so good is the character development of Banerjee, he has come along in leaps and bounds, acquiring a much warranted confidence, apparent in how he conducts his inquiry.

Banerjee is now more than strong enough to point out Sam's shortcomings as a real friend, opening Sam's eyes to the fact he is just not as liberal as he thinks, that he fails to stand up for Banerjee, and worse, openly urges him to go easy on the British suspects. Sam seriously underestimates Banerjee, a symbolic micro-echo of the troubling relationship between Britain and India. India is inexorably moving towards independence, personified in a Banerjee turning the tables on Sam, a perceptible shift of power in their relationship. Fantastic read that I highly recommend. Many thanks to Random House Vintage for an ARC.
Profile Image for Annet.
570 reviews945 followers
February 1, 2020
Absolutely love this writer, love this series. Can't wait for the next, already....
Full of character, atmosphere, colour, India, history, great storytelling, what can I say, I'm a big fan of Sam Wyndham, the main and troubled character in this series, and the talented writer Abir Mukherjee. When's the next up? ;-)
Immensly enjoyed this book. Would recommend this series to my goodreads friends any day.

Captain Sam Wyndham, to battle his opium addiction, travels to the hills of Assam, to an ashram of a sainted monk. Alternating, we look back at his starting years at the police in London, confronted by the murder of a young lady of his acquaintance. The past and present in the end come together in India...
Profile Image for Carolyn Walsh .
1,905 reviews563 followers
March 29, 2022
This is a splendid, atmospheric addition to the previous three books featuring Captain Sam Wyndham and Indian Sergeant Surendranath 'Surrender-not' Banerjee of the Imperial Police Force in Calcutta.
The stories are set in the turbulent 1920s in India. India is considered the Jewel in the Crown of the British Empire. Its people are struggling for self-rule, free from British colonial occupation. The British feel entitled and superior to the natives and feel the Indian people have neither the capacity nor the capability of governing themselves without British control and wisdom. In their segregated social clubs, the British fear their time in India is running out but want to forestall any independence movement.

This well-researched historical novel is told in two timelines and contains two clever locked-room mysteries and plenty of intrigue and suspense. It explores India's culture and religion and the lifestyles of the British living and working there with their superior attitudes and prejudice. In 1905, Captain Sam Wyndham was a young policeman in London's impoverished East End. There is an undercurrent of anti-immigrant bigotry inflamed by the press, especially towards the Jews and their businesses. One evening Wyndham sees an old flame from his past on the street. She is Bessie Drummond, whom he treated badly. He observes Bessie being beaten in the streets. The next day she is found in her room bludgeoned to death. Her room was locked from the inside.

She lived in a run-down apartment house and worked as a housekeeper for Caine, a powerful, wealthy man who owned the building. She also earned some extra money collecting rent from the tenants. She is married to a brute of a husband who drinks to excess. The Spiller brothers are involved in much criminal activity in the area but are under the direction of Caine, the landlord of the building where Bessie had lived and died. Her husband has an alibi, so suspicion falls on Vogel, a Jewish man living in the same dingy housing complex. The anti-Jew press stirs up hatred towards Vogel. Vogel is in hiding, but Wyndham is told where to find him by the Spiller brothers. Sam makes the arrest, and Vogel is charged and convicted of the murder and sentenced to death while proclaiming his innocence.

Wyndham begins to feel that Vogel is innocent, and it is unlikely that a non-Jew would have been convicted on so little evidence. He discovers that Caine's wife was recently found dead in her bed, and Bessie observed some mysterious injuries on her chest. These wounds were omitted from the autopsy and police reports.

In 1922 Captain Sam Wyndham is a member of the Imperial Police Force in Calcutta. He works alongside Sergeant Banerjee. They have become friends and roommates, but Wyndham always exerts control of their investigations, and Banerjee acts in the expected subservient manner towards his partner. Wyndham can understand the desire for home rule but is not without ingrown prejudices. Because of past incidences, such as time in the trenches during WW1 and the death of his wife during the flu epidemic, Sam has fallen deeper into opium addiction. He is a diligent and insightful detective and a witty conversationalist. He is flawed but can be likeable. Should he be exposed for his dependency on opium and would lose his position as a police officer. He is urged by a doctor and Banerjee to seek a cure. He goes to an ashram in the hills of Assam run by a Hindu holy man. He and his monks are known to foster successful recoveries from addictions.

It is a long journey to the ashram in the remote hill country of Assam. At a train station, Wyndham is shocked to see someone from the unresolved 1905 case whom he thought was long dead. He wonders if he is hallucinating due to his intake of opium. He undergoes a painful withdrawal from drugs and, in a sickened state, is guided back to his room by Emily Carter, a lady who volunteers to help at the ashram. A young Belgian who was close to recovery is found drowned, his death written off as an accident. Still, Wyndham wonders if he was murdered due to their similar physical appearance and if the Belgian had been mistaken for him. After being considered cured, Wyndham is permitted to stay in the small nearby town of Jatinga. He has written to Banerjee inviting him to join him.

Jatinga has a haunted, other-worldly aura. Birds fling themselves to the ground by the thousands each year in a mass suicide. Some of the locals believe evil spirits are involved. I thought the author added a touch of the supernatural to his otherwise true, well-researched, historical facts. This is an actual annual phenomenon in the hill town of Jatinga and is described in many internet articles. The town is trying to establish this unpleasant event as a tourist attraction.

On the night of the birds falling from the sky, there was a party at the elaborate home of Emily Carter and her husband, Ronald. Ronald Carter is a man of wealth and influence. He has made enemies in his greedy rise to power. Wyndham suspects he was mistreating his wife, Emily. A number of guests were invited to stay overnight after the party. Carter is found dead in his bed. His room was locked from the inside. ( like Bessie's in 1905 and with similar markings on his chest that Bessie had observed on his dead wife ). The nature of the markings seemed caused by an impossible source anywhere in the vicinity.

Banerjee arrives about 75% through the book, and Wyndham is overjoyed to see him. Local authorities put Banerjee in charge of the investigation into Ronald Carter's murder, an unusual assignment for an Indian sergeant. Banerjee interrogates all members of the household, with Wyndham present. He has gained great confidence and is no longer differential or submissive to the English suspects. After his interviews, Wyndham admonishes him for challenging questions that made the suspects uncomfortable. Banerjee replies by saying he was subject to plenty of racial slurs and bigoted name-calling during his questioning, and Wyndham ignored their prejudices and took them for granted.
He also retorts that Wyndham has never learned to pronounce his name in all their time together, and he finds the Surrender-not nickname offensive. Perhaps this confrontation will make their friendship stronger in the future? Hopefully, it will make Wyndham reflect on their more equal status.

Highly recommended to those who like an excellent historical mystery in an exotic place with significant character development and a vibrant sense of time and place, and set in a time of political, social and religious upheaval. Moving on expectantly to book number 5 in the series.
Profile Image for Emma.
1,009 reviews1,212 followers
February 9, 2020
Fourth in the Sam Wyndham series, Death in the East continues the trend of Smoke and Ashes in significantly upping its game. It offers a more challenging read, deepening the themes and character relationships, and marking a significant reshaping of both the form and the content of the books. And to top it off, it’s all done through two locked-room murder mysteries that have you guessing right till the end…

‘In the absence of gen (information) on any of them, I decided to fall back on the natural intuition of the Englishman in regard to foreigners. Or to put it another way, I’d rely on deep prejudices, honed over generations’.

Captain Sam Wyndham has been a love him AND hate him character right from the beginning. Uncomfortably reflecting the imperious superiority and institutional, intellectual, and cultural racism of the British in India, he’s a man whose words and actions frequently make you cringe. The only reason any kind of connection to his character is possible, and thus any potential for likability, is through the moments in which he reveals a more open side to his nature. Unlike so many of his peers, he does actually see the unfairness of the situation and often highlights the frankly ridiculous and unsupportable ‘supremacy’ of the British and other Europeans/Americans in India with an internal dialogue characterised by a wry humour. But Abir Mukherjee never allows him to step into the role of ‘the good Englishman’, an example of perfect enlightenment who could act as a balm to the otherwise embarrassingly and horrifyingly realistic portrayal of British imperial rule. Each time Sam takes a step forward, we are reminded that prejudices run deep, and are not so easily sidelined. This is particularly evident in his relationship with his subordinate. Sam might take his advice, live with him, and even have his life saved by him, but when push comes to shove, everything reverts right back to standard operating procedure, putting that uppity man in his place. How dare he question me. Good lord. Whatever next. Sam doesn’t even use his sergeant’s real name, Surendranath Banerjee, instead falling back on the Englishified nickname ‘Surrender-not’, because why should he bother to learn how to say someone’s name if the pronunciation is just a bit too hard…

There’s been little challenge to this status quo until now. But this story is about progress, and honestly, it’s about time. Some changes Sam finally takes upon himself, like dealing with his opium addiction, others are forced upon him, like the negotiation of his relationship with Sergeant Banerjee. Especially now that the ever more fierce struggle for Indian independence is making real waves and undermining the locals’ traditionally deferential attitude towards the British invaders. Certainly, Banerjee’s enthusiasm for taking Sam’s shit is well past over. I can’t wait to see where it takes them both in the future, with the potential of a real friendship becoming a possibility now that some truths have been said aloud. Their relationship is a microcosm of the larger tensions in British/Indian society and Mukherjee doesn’t hold back in dealing with issues like racism, injustice, corruption, and the power of greed. It gives his books that extra something, enough of a kick to make you think seriously about the past and how these issues still resonate today.

The plot perhaps edges into the somewhat unrealistic but it’s more than entertaining enough to let those unlikely coincidences slide. The mirroring is cleverly done: a woman’s death in a locked room in the East End of London in 1905 is reflected in that of a man in the Far East in 1922, the second ‘murder’ suspiciously linked to the original crime. And Sam Wyndham is deeply involved in both. The flashbacks to his life in London and the interweaving of the two stories, with evidence important to both crimes gradually revealed, was an interesting narrative choice and an effective means of illuminating Sam’s past while keeping it relevant to the current timeline. It all adds up to being a great read, written with an increasing confidence and the kind of flair that makes you excited for what comes next.

ARC via Netgalley
Profile Image for K.J. Charles.
Author 65 books12.1k followers
Read
November 20, 2019
This series gets better with every book and this one is fantastic. Incredibly atmospheric, both in the now of a remote colonial outpost in 1920s India and in the flashbacks to 1905 London. The human story of English war veteran turned policeman Sam Wyndham and his sergeant Surendranath Banerjee continues to develop, as Sam tries to kick his opium addiction and Surendranath starts to fight against his colonised mindset and develops pro-independence views. (The series engages directly and powerfully with colonialism through Sam's morally confused viewpoint, which veers between habitual racism and a growing awareness that, er, he's part of an occupying force that's stolen a country.) I particularly liked the way Surendranath pushes back against the way he's been nicknamed 'Surrender-not' because the English--including Sam--can't be bothered to learn to pronounce his name, and how Sam's internal narration then veers between the names, as bad habits collide with the realisation that he owes his friend and colleague more respect.

Add in a depiction of antisemitic prejudice in Britain and this is a very powerfully political book, which doesn't detract from the history or the mystery at all. It's intensely engaged because it should be.

Terrific stuff. If you like detective novels or historicals you should be reading this series.
Profile Image for William.
676 reviews413 followers
December 1, 2019
4.5 stars

For me, this is by far the most personal of Abir's books, delving into English class distinctions and the shifting of power near the end of the British Raj in India. Much of this is deeply painful, and yet Abir celebrates his own acceptance and success in modern Britain today.

As usual with my reviews, please first read the publisher’s blurb/summary of the book. Thank you.

These two timeline views frame the action of the two stories: The first is a young copper Sam Wyndham in east London in 1905, and the second is Sam's retreat into an ashram in 1922 to recover from his growing opium addiction.

The marvellous Surendranath Bannerjee does not appear until the final quarter of the book, and his presence is very different from the previous books. Both Sam and Suren have matured significantly since they last worked together, and Suren's direction of the murder mystery near the ashram is superb.

The two timelines are brought together through a chance siting of a villain on his way to the ashram. And as with all of this series, a kind of justice is served. Wonderful stuff.


Full size image here

The young Sam as a new copper in the east end of London is frustratingly naive.

Sam possibly sees a villain
And while the thought that after all these years I should suddenly hallucinate about a long-dead murderer was perplexing, what really terrified me was the fear that I might be descending into madness.

Sam remembers the murder mystery in the east end of London, when he was a very young man
My first View of Bessie had been of her head poking out of the second-storey window of her ramshackle tenement, bold as the bust on the prow of a ship, and aiming curses at the crowd in the street below. She had the dark hair and sharp features of a Boudicca and the tongue of a dock worker, and she couldn’t have been much older than twenty. But when you saw her close-up, it was the eyes you really noticed: deep and brown and quick. You couldn’t read them, but one glance from them and you knew, you just knew, this girl was smart, smarter than most men at any rate, and that given half a chance she’d show you just how much smarter. She was pretty too, but the eyes: the spark within them and the window they afforded into the mind beyond, they made her special.

In 1922, Sam considers how he has arrived in India
St Francis was changing back into Brother Shankar, and suddenly I was struck by a deep clarity: a chain of events that had begun that day in 1918 when I was blown up by a German shell; which had continued with the death of my wife, and my decision to leave England for India and opium; all of it led to and culminated here, in this moment, with me lying collapsed and wretched in the dust of a monastery courtyard under the pitying gaze of the goddess Kali.

Sam considers the melting pot (or not) of the east end of London in 1905
Why Whitechalpel? Because this is where they got off the boats, and because no one with any other choice wanted to live there. It had always been this way. Before the Jews had come the Irish, fleeing famine, and before them the Huguenots, running from religious wars. Always someone escaping something, and coming here with nothing because they had no choice, and because a life of nothing was better than no life at all.

Strange events near the ashram in 1922
And suddenly I remembered my scripture: the story of Legion, the demons cast out by Jesus into a herd of swine. And all the devils besought him, saying, Send us into the swine, that we may enter into them. And forthwith Jesus gave them leave. And the unclean spirits went out, and entered into the swine: and the herd ran violently down a steep place into the sea, and were choked in the sea. Like every schoolboy in England, I’d been taught the story, but I’d never believed in its literal truth. Not until now.

Sam has a revelation, and his respect, understanding and appreciation of Suren deepens
Not for the first time, I was forced to contemplate the nature of my compatriots. We liked to think of ourselves as a noble race, the architects ofthe greatest empire the world had ever known, but our behaviour was still rooted in the narrow-minded mentality of that wet little island whence we came. The truth was we wasted an inordinate amount of time and energy on our petty hierarchies and hypocrisies.
Profile Image for Andy.
482 reviews89 followers
October 21, 2023
The 4th in the series, where I am catching up slowly but surely.

This one is set over two time periods, firstly in London in 1905 when Sam had jus joined the Met Police & then in 1922 where he has jus entered a monastery (for rehab) for his opium addiction which was where we left him at the end of the prior book.

I’m sure his delirium (in rehab) will be the cause for the first time period?

Although both tales are retold in equal measure, it’s with the first setting (1905) that we find more of the murder mystery element. We are also taken away from the Calcutta that we have grown to know in the first three books finding ourselves either in London or a remote monastery & latterly the surrounding plantations/forests. Sam’s able sidekick is also missing for most of the book so the story landscape is very different in those respects, but don’t let it put you off as the author has weaved a wonderful tale which has enabled us to see why Sam got to where he was in terms of India & his addictions.

Great characters throughout along with the historical landscape which includes the tang of Empire in this period.

Cleverly comes together & I Shall spill no more.

Very readable, very enjoyable series which has got better book on book, clear 5 stars for this outing.
Profile Image for Vilius.
204 reviews34 followers
May 24, 2023
Pagal apimtį kol kas ilgiausia iš serijos knygų. Ir nenuostabu, nes veiksmas vyksta dviejuose laiko linijose - 1922-ųjų Indijoje ir 1905-ųjų Londone. Londono dalis tokia šiek tiek aktyvesnė - su daugiau veiksmo, o indiška Agatos Christie stiliaus mįslė. Patiko, kaip ir ankstesnės dalys.
Profile Image for Viktorija| Laisvalaikis su knyga.
205 reviews50 followers
May 27, 2025
Ši "Kalkutos detektyvo" serijos dalis man buvo pati geriausia❤️ Joje veiksmas vyko dviem laikais: 1922 ir 1905 metais. Juose pasipylė viena po kitos žmogžudystės, Semas Vindemas turi nuoskaudų iš senų laikų. Skaitant taip priminė kitos mano mėgstamos autorės Agatos Kristi kūrinius: čia netekėjo kraujo upeliai, "Mirtis Rytuose" parašyta nestokojant humoro, veiksmas vyko tarpukariu, kurio laikmetis puikiai pavaizduotas. Taip, nuspėjau tik vieną kaltininką, bet tai nesugadino skaitymo malonumo❤️
Profile Image for Chetan.
315 reviews8 followers
May 23, 2022
In every novel of this extraordinary series, Abir Mukherjee brings in new aspects of India under the rule of the British Raj. Always subtly portraying the British acts of deplorability in the backdrop of these terrific murder mysteries rich in culture and history. This is a must-read for fans of this genre.
Profile Image for Shannon M (Canada).
497 reviews174 followers
April 16, 2025
DEATH IN THE EAST is the fourth book in the Sam Wyndham series by Abir Mukherjee. I didn't like it quite as much as the last one I read—A Necessary Evil—because it wasn't quite as amusing as that one. But mystery lovers might like it more than A Necessary Evil because "Death in the East" is closer in style to the traditional mystery structure. It contains two—yes, two—locked-room puzzlers, and an Agatha Christie-like sequence near the end where, after a man is found dead, the potential suspects are interrogated about their movements one by one.

The story begins in 1922 at the remote town of Jatinga in the hills of Assam, where Sam has gone to an ashram to seek a cure for his escalating opium addiction, a dependency that has put his police career in jeopardy. Arriving at the train station, he catches a glimpse of a man who looms large in his memories, a man he thought dead. But he dismisses this brief sighting as an hallucination.

The story then shifts to London in 1905, where Sam, as a young police constable, describes the attack on a young woman named Bessie Drummond. During the first attack, he saves Bessie from her assailants, but a day later, Bessie is dead, and the killer appears to be a Jewish immigrant. The story shifts back and forth between the investigation of Bessie's murder in 1905, and the cure that Sam undergoes at the ashram run by a Hindu holy man. (The cure involves a foul tasting liquid and lots of vomiting, as well as meditation.)

At the ashram, Sam meets a volunteer worker, Mrs. Emily Carter, who (of course) he finds very attractive. (Of course, because, in each novel, Sam seems to fall under the spell of a beautiful woman who later becomes a potential suspect.)

A major theme running through the novel is the prejudice that existed in both time periods against those different from the British. In 1905, it was the Jewish immigrants who were shunned; in 1922, it was the Indian natives who were considered inferior. There are several passages describing these biases, such as:

Even here among drug addicts, it seemed the racial pyramid of empire still held firm.

Yet he and others seemed to harbour a special distaste for the Jews. It couldn't just be because of their foreign tongue and worship of an alien god—the Chinese, after all, did both too—but Jews committed the additional sin of looking like us.

Sam shares these prejudices, yet he is also aware of them and, as the series progresses, the stories include a description of the changing relationship between Sam and Sergeant Banerjee. For example, it is in this book that Banerjee finally asks Sam to call him by his real name—not 'Surrender-not', but 'Surrendranath':

You call yourself my friend, yet you don't even make the effort to call me by my real name.

As Sam is unable to pronounce 'Surrendranath' correctly, they compromise with 'Suren'.

Sam solves Bessie's murder in 1905, but is unable to save the life of the Jew who was charged with it. Furthermore, the real murderer escapes by leaving Britain for places unknown. Until Sam discovers him in Jatinga.

Then, in Jatinga, there are two more deaths.

The only negative in this novel is that Sergeant Banerjee does not appear in Assam until around the 75% point. But when he does appear, he immediately takes charge, given authority over the investigation because Sam's judgment would be compromised by the fact that he has made friends with some of the potential suspects.

The case is solved, the outcome is satisfying, and in the concluding paragraph, Sergeant Banerjee says:
'Remember what happened here today, Sam...There may come a time when I ask you to look the other way too. For justice, or for me.'

A nice lead-in to Book #5 in the series, which I have yet to read.

Thanks to the Greater Victoria Public Library for providing me with a 'Large Print' copy of this novel.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
My reviews for other books in this series:
 A Rising Man (Sam Wyndham, #1
 A Necessary Evil (Sam Wyndham, #2
 Smoke and Ashes (Sam Wyndham, #3
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Profile Image for Justė.
457 reviews146 followers
July 5, 2024
indiška uždaryto kambario mįslė

‘Mirtis rytuose’ tai dvi, rodos, atskiros detektyvinės istorijos - viena 1905 Londono skurdžių kvartale, kita 1922-ais gilioje Indijos provincijoje, kur nė elektros nėra. Ir abi jos pateikia po klasikinės uždaryto kambario mįslės variantą.

Indijos egzotikos šį kartą mažiau - iš įdomesnių momentų telieka hinduistai vienuoliai gydantys nuo priklausomybių. Politiniai momentai taip pat nustumti į galą, jų vietą šį kartą užima antisemitizmas ir kitokia netolerancija imigrantams Britanijoje. Žodžiu to išskirtumo šį kartą man kažkiek pritrūko.

Abi detektyvinės istorijos ir vėl paprastos, logiškos, nuoseklios. Viena jau svyravo ant tos perdėm mandro nusikaltimo ribos, bet sugebėjo likti šiapus. Įdomus ir jos narpliojimo būdas - priminė labai Agatos Kristi taip mėgstamus siužetus, kur viskas išsiaiškinama tiesiog ilgai kalbantis su uždara grupe žmonių, buvusių nusikaltimo vietoje jo metu. Man pasirodė, kad kiek per sudėtinga buvo skaitytojui užuominas pokalbyje susirasti pačiam, nors šiaip ar taip, nusikaltimas gana nuspėjamas.

Tokia kiek iškritusi iš visos serijos pasirodė ši knyga - beveik jokių žinomų veikėjų, jokių išskirtinių serijos bruožų, toks atrodo pabėgimas nuo kasdienybės.
Profile Image for Emma.
2,677 reviews1,085 followers
March 12, 2022
Seriously good. We learn more about Sam’s past, Suren finally takes issue with being called Surrender-not because the Brits are too lazy to say his name correctly, and we see a much more serious side to Banerjee that showed Sam he has seriously underestimated his junior colleague. We also have Sam’s treatment at the Ashram for his addiction. I wonder if the cure will hold in future books? Time will tell!
Profile Image for Chrisl.
607 reviews85 followers
December 20, 2019
Particularly appreciated the ending. No more Surrender ... visiting some youtube sites Assam useful
Profile Image for 8stitches 9lives.
2,853 reviews1,724 followers
November 14, 2019
Death in the East is the fourth novel in the Calcutta-based detective, Captain Sam Wyndham, series and is one of the most compulsively readable and interesting historical fiction series' out there at the moment. It isn't necessary to have read the previous instalments but you will probably want to if you enjoy this one. Set in 1922, Sam Wyndham has had the shock of his life and is shaken to the core. On a train journey to Shyam, he alights at Assam despite his important reason for travelling. Wyndham has an opiate addiction and is in desperate need of help. However, the face he sees in Assam is one he never thought he would see again (it's not the drugs) because the guy was reported dead. So was exactly is going on and will Sam get up again having been knocked for six? The potent combination of history, mystery and social commentary really make this a must-read if you appreciate substance as well as style in a thriller.

There arent many crime thrillers set in India so I adored reading about the places that are described so vividly in the text that you feel as if you're actually there with the characters. I particularly enjoyed the social commentary and critique of the time and it made the whole book full of depth and complexity. As a UK colony at the time we bear witness to some awful racist remarks amongst the pages but I would say it's, sadly, accurate of the time and of sentiments. It is structured as a dual narrative with events taking place in present-day but with flashbacks to 1905 in which Bessie Drummond was brutally killed. It is a real page-turner with twists around each corner and a cleverly woven plot with so many different layers to it. This is a slow-burn novel for the majority of the time but towards the end, the action is kicked up a couple of gears and the conclusion both shocks and amazes. Many thanks to Harvill Secker for an ARC.
Profile Image for Veronique.
1,362 reviews225 followers
November 20, 2019
This was a title I wanted for quite a while, pretty much since finishing Smoke and Ashes, and Abir Mukherjee delivers once more, offering us another brilliant historical crime novel.

After three books, it is only fair to say that I am fully invested in Sam Wyndham. We find him finally dealing with his opium addiction, going to a ashram in Assam, on the advice of his doctor, to seek treatment. He knows he will go through hell, but what he doesn’t expect is to see a ghost from his past.

The narration switches between the India of 1922 and the London East End of 1905 when Sam was a young police constable. As he did for Calcutta, Mukherjee brings Whitechapel into relief, in all its poverty, a veritable melting pot of cultures, but also with rampant crime and anti-immigrant hysteria. Sounds sadly familiar... Sad, yes, but not devoid of hope.

I personally loved this, both for the excellent plot and writing style, but even more the development of the characters. Sam, of course, but also Banerjee, who grows in confidence, and their resulting friendship.


I received a copy of this book through NetGalley for an honest review. My thanks to Random House UK, Vintage Publishing, and to Abir Mukherjee for the opportunity.
Profile Image for Charlene.
1,079 reviews122 followers
October 29, 2021
I was especially looking forward to #4 in this series of historical mysteries set in early 1920s India because at the end of #3, Sam Wyndham (our British policeman) was heading off to an ashram to cure his opium addiction. I was expecting that to be the setting for the next mystery but instead, the story begins and switches frequently back 1905 when Sam was in his first year as a constable in London's East End. Yes, it all connects and yes, the East End parts are interesting and well-written, even giving an additional ethnic flavor to the story as the 1905 murder is blamed on a recent Jewish immigrant community.

Sam is rather quickly done with the opium cure & in a recovery among the small British community nearby where he is surprised by someone from that 1905 murder.

I enjoyed the switch from Calcutta to a rural Indian setting in Assam; enjoyed the new confidence of the Indian sergeant when he comes on to help solve the case near the end of the novel. The final murder seemed unbelievably complicated but definitely interesting. Looking forward to #5 coming out later this year, hoping Sam really does have his opium habit beaten and that Sergeant Surendranath Banarjee plays a larger role.
Profile Image for Susan in NC.
1,080 reviews
September 7, 2020
4.5 stars - I love this series, it just keeps getting better. This one had not one but two locked room mysteries for Sam Wyndham - one as a young constable In London in 1905, another in 1922 Assam.

Sam has finally been forced to deal with his opium addiction, a lasting and painful reminder of his WWI service. The 1922 portion of the book opens with him traveling to an ashram in Assam that treats opium addicts; as he’s leaving the train, he spots a suspect from the past he thought long dead.

Spotting the ghost from his past leads to the 1905 portion of the book, which starts with the young Constable Wyndham on patrol, breaking up a fight where a woman has been hurt. Turns out she’s an old flame of his, but she won’t give the police any information about why the men were fighting, or why she’s involved. Soon, she’s found brutally murdered in her own bed - Sam feels he let her down, but there are layers of deceit here - no spoilers, but him being a young, naive cop, I just knew this wasn’t going to end well. The switch back and forth in time is not a favorite device, although Mukherjee handles it extremely well - the reader is left on tenterhooks from chapter to chapter, as we jump back and forth!

In Assam, Sam goes through the grueling treatment, then as he is just about ready to leave, a fellow ashram resident is found dead. Sam can’t help feeling it wasn’t an accident, that the ghost from his past may have been after him - and the unfortunate fellow patient bore a resemblance, and happened to wander away from the ashram at the wrong time. Sam summons Sgt. Bannerjee, his Bengali partner, to help investigate - soon, another death needs their attention, and the two fellow officers, roommates and friends face a reckoning.

This was wonderful, especially once Bannerjee arrived and things started coming together — the author gives a heartfelt afterword about how he started out just wanting to write a locked room mystery, but amid the rising nationalism around the world (this was in 2019), he wanted to address anti-immigrant sentiment. Or in the case of India and the Raj, the treatment of natives like Sgt. Banerjee by the British in his own country. I thought this was very well handled, and overdue - a friend who reviewed the previous book (Smoke and Ashes) pointed out that the two men had been roommates for a year, and the relationship seemed strangely static for that amount of intimacy. A valid point, upon reflection, and I think this book definitely moves their friendship forward in important ways. I can’t wait for the next book!
Profile Image for Tripfiction.
2,045 reviews216 followers
February 6, 2020
Murder Mystery set in ASSAM and EAST LONDON



This is the fourth in the Sam Wyndham series and can be read as a stand alone.

1922. It is now time that Sam Wyndham goes to an ashram to shake his addiction to opium. it is certainly a gruelling and deeply unpleasant process but really he has no choice. His continued habit would soon affect his sleuthing. Narcotic abuse is a capricious master and he has to commit to a regime of vomiting, sweats and potions until he emerges from this hellish period, as a hopefully cleansed and reformed man.

This is a dual timeline novel and much of the early part of the novel is also set in 1905 in the East of London. The death of a woman – with whom Wyndham had been romantically involved – proves to be a more complex affair than at first mooted. Suspicion settles on a Jewish man but of course things are not as they seem.

The two stories run alongside each other and murder in India tests Wyndham’s investigative skills.
As always with Abir Mukherjee’s novels, there is delightful detail that really transports the reader back in time and place. Many people will be aghast at the casual racism of the era but that was, I am sure, how it was. The feel of London with its fog and street creeping people, and India, with its heat and colour, come to vibrant life in the hands of the author.

Part of the book is set in Jatinga, Assam and the novel opens as birds fly to their deaths. Over the last 100 years, thousands of birds have flown to their death over a small strip of land in Jatinga, India. In a town of only 2,500 people, this bizarre Bermuda Triangle of fowl death remains largely unexplained, despite studies by India’s most prestigious ornithologists. Read more about this very odd phenomenon on this link. Learning about curious events like this are all part of the wonders of literary wanderlust. Enjoy.
Profile Image for Gintautas Ivanickas.
Author 24 books294 followers
April 29, 2022
Samas Wyndhamas, Kalkutos policijos kapitonas,kaip koks kreiseris „Maskva“, pasiekė dugną. Bet kitaip, nei jau minėtas kreiseris, turi šansą išplaukt. Ir kabindamasis į tą šansą Samas keliauja į atokų ašramą, tikėdamasis, kad ten pavyks atsikratyti priklausomybės nuo opijaus. Pakeliui, geležinkelio stotyje jam pasidingoja, kad išvydo veidą iš savo praeities, kai buvo dar tik pradedantis tarnybą Londono konsteblis. Bet tai galėjo būti tik opijaus iškankintų smegenų sukelta haliucinacija. Tačiau vėliau, jau ašrame, kai paslaptingai žūsta vienas iš ten besigydančių, savo sudėjimu labai panašus į Wyndhamą, pastarasis susimąsto – gal tai anaiptol ne nelaimingas atsitikimas, o taikiniu turėjo būti jis pats?
Pasakojimas skyla į dvi dalis – 1905 metų Londonas ir 1922 Indija. Tai gaunam kaip ir du detektyvus už vieno kainą. Tiesa, kitaip, nei ankstesniuose romanuose, gauname gerokai mažiau istorinio fono. Jei 1905-jų Londoną dar jaučiame, tai veiksmas Indijoje, regis, vyksta beveik be laiko atspindžių – na, žinutė laikraštyje ir pasikeitęs Surendranato (kuris šįsyk, beje, pasirodo tik knygai persiritus gerokai per tris ketvirčius) elgesys – sutikim, mažoka. Tačiau nepaisant to (ir dar to, kad indiškoji detektyvo dalis tokia akivaizdi, kad Wyndhamą norėjosi mušt už proto vangumą, bet nurašykim tai gydymo pasekmėms) – bene geriausia ciklo knyga. Ir neklauskit, kodėl. Subjektyviai. Bet skaitėsi labai smagiai. Ir labai greitai – atsivertus nė akimirkai nekilo noras atidėt į šalį.
Tai šitai daliai nepagailėsiu ir penkių. Tegul skystų, bet už suteiktą malonumą negaila. Visam ciklui būtų kiek mažiau, bet neabejotinai rekomenduotinas. Ypač istorinio detektyvo mylėtojui.
Profile Image for RG.
3,084 reviews
November 30, 2019
I dont understand why this series doesnt habe more readers. Its so good!! Such a clever combination of history and crime but thr characters are what I return for. So well constructed ans deconstructed
Profile Image for John.
1,680 reviews131 followers
June 15, 2022
A friend recommended this author and I am so glad he did. Suicidal birds, opium addicts, evil villains and London in 1905 and Assam in 1923. The story follows Inspector Wyndham going to a retreat to overcome his opium addiction. There he comes across his nemesis from when he was a young constable. The story switches between the two time periods and the investigation into the murder of a friend of Wyndham.

The story is a locked room mystery with an ingenious solution. The story follows the inherent racism of the Raj and the inequality of justice both in England and India.

A very enjoyable and easy read. I look forward to catching up with the rest of the series.
Profile Image for Sneha Pathak (reader_girl_reader).
427 reviews116 followers
April 3, 2021
The best in this series yet. I have followed this series from the best book and have enjoyed all of the books so far. This book, though, is my favorite so far. Set in two timelimes and two different places and with a locked room mystery, this book kept me reading. Although Surendranath Banerjee makes an appearance only in theast one fourth of the book, Sam Wyndham keeps one glued to the narrative. Also, the colonial and political aspects of the time are explores very well in the book.
Profile Image for Jennifer (JC-S).
3,534 reviews285 followers
April 3, 2022
‘A snap of fear, cold and violent ran down my spine.’

After reading this novel on the recommendation of a friend, I discovered that it is the fourth in a series. While this novel makes perfect sense as a standalone, I am intrigued and will be seeking out the earlier books.

The novel is set in 1922, with flashbacks to tragic events in East London in 1905. In 1922, Captain Sam Wyndham is in India. He heads to an ashram in the hills of Assam, where he hopes to beat his addiction to opium. But after he arrives, he sees a man from his past in London: a man he thought was dead.

In 1905, Sam Wyndham was a young constable with a beat in East London. He comes across a friend, Bessie Drummond, who has been attacked in the street. Bessie won’t speak of the attack, but the next day she is found brutally killed in her own room. The door is locked from the inside. Who killed Bessie, and why? Wyndham has never forgotten the case.

As the story shifts between 1922 and events in 1905, Mr Mukherjee gives us a clear view of both life in the East End of London in 1905, and life in colonial India. There are quite a few twists as the story unfolds, and an ending I found particularly satisfying. And now, I need to seek out the earlier books to find out more about Sam Wyndham and his colleague Surendranath Bannerjee.

Jennifer Cameron-Smith

Profile Image for Amit Tiwary.
478 reviews45 followers
July 15, 2020
This is a very good read. Abir is brilliant. Very beautiful story, great characterization, the absolutely perfect mix of cultural and contemporary inputs, and a near stunning climax.

This is going to be a very successful series.
Profile Image for Kristina Monika.
245 reviews8 followers
March 19, 2023
Man "Mirtis rytuose" - kol kas pati geriausia šios serijos knyga (iš skaitytų pirmų keturių).

Šį kartą knygoje gauni ne vieną, o net du žmogžudysčių tyrimus, kuriuos skiria 20 metų ir daugybė kilometrų: žmogžudystę Londone, kurią Vindemas tyrė savo karjeros policijoje pradžioje, ir po 20 metų Indijos provincijoje Džatingoje, kur Vindemas gydosi savo priklausomybę nuo opijaus, įvykdytą žmogžudystę. Patys detektyviniai tyrimai nėra labai įmantrūs ar išskirtiniai (bet ir ne prasti), tačiau kadangi knygoje kartu paliečiama ne viena tema ir toliau rutuliojamos Vindemo bei Banerdžio istorijos, nuo knygos buvo sunku atsitraukti, nes buvo įdomu skaityti apie XX a. pr. imigrantų (daugiausia, žydų) padėtį D. Britanijoje ir sekti, kaip Vindemui sekasi gydytis bei kaip keičiasi Vindemo ir Banerdžio santykiai vienas su kitu ir kaip jie keičiasi patys. Beje, Banerdžis pasirodo tik antroje knygos pusėje - ir nors skaitant jo nebuvau pasigedusi, bet seržanto atvykimas į Džatingą nudžiugino, nes Vindemas plius Banerdžis yra daug geriau nei Vindemas be Banerdžio :) Kartu su seržantu knygoje iškart atsiranda daug geros tarpusavio chemijos ir daugiau humoro bei smagių dialogų.
Kas dar patiko šioje dalyje - kad joje buvo daug mažiau politinių intrigų ir niuansų nei ankstesnėse ir todėl daugiau dėmesio detektyvinėms linijoms bei Vindemui su Banerdžiu.

Knyga labai įtrauki - susiskaitė lengvai ir greitai. Su nekantrumu laukiu penktos serijos dalies vertimo į lietuvių kalbą, nes jau pamėgau pagrindinių veikėjų duetą ir labai įdomu, kaip jiems seksis toliau.
Profile Image for Leah.
1,732 reviews290 followers
abandoned
November 13, 2019
I have thoroughly enjoyed this series except for the unfortunate aspect of the lead character being addicted to opium, and the reader being treated to endless descriptions of cravings, opium dreams and withdrawal symptoms, all of which has been increasing in each new book. In this one, he's undergoing a cure, so I decided to stick with the series for one more book. But now we're getting all of the above, plus the side-effects of the cure. I have no desire to read endless descriptions of people vomiting. Does anyone enjoy that? Is there an actual mystery? I'm at 20% and there is one from Sam's past in London years ago, but nothing in the current timeline.

I give up. I may resume the series if reviews of future books tell me that Sam is cured and plot takes precedence over addiction descriptions, as it did in the first couple of excellent books. What a pity. This looked set to become a favourite series. I wonder why Mukherjee thought this would be an interesting addition to Sam's already interesting character and interesting setting? It really isn't.
Profile Image for Ali.
1,797 reviews162 followers
February 13, 2020
The most disappointing entry in the series to date for me, with a parallel timeframe story detracting from both pacing and immersion. I really love this series, and there is a magnificent scene where Surendanatha finally calls our protoganist out, but in the end the flashbacks failed to connect strongly enough to the current story to feel coherent.

….. Spoilers Below

Profile Image for Paula.
959 reviews224 followers
March 19, 2020
One of the best series,and one of the best duos around.9/10. Even if the solve was a bit obvious, Mukherjee writes beautifully, with great characters and thought provoking issues
Displaying 1 - 30 of 582 reviews

Join the discussion

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.