I was tricked by the title into thinking that I'd get to know all about the wrath of nature which led to the Chennai floods in 2015. What actually partook was the ambush of facts about inefficiency, misconduct, exoneration, and indifference of bureaucracy.
Krupa patiently, but succinctly, divulges assorted facets of the disaster with a sensitive fervor. A few interesting topics covered were: a basic education on the current and historic status of waterbodies, drainage, and settlement patterns of Chennai; coverage of impact, distress, relief, and anecdotes of- estranged families, defenseless hospitals, precarious travel, ravaged slums, NGOs, spread of rumours; the movements and literature that arose for awareness - e.g. Chennai Poromboke Paadal ft. T M Krishna by Jayaraman and Kaber Vasuki. She has not shied away from naming organizations and the exact pain-points, ridiculous responses, and her exasperation at various political bodies.
Although I was blanketed by the madness of it all, a few chapters on how relief was provided in incredible ways by compassionate people, mostly those who were victims themselves, warmed me to the spirit of the city. But I part with the book sickened by as nothing valuable was learned from the calamity and that we cannot expect anything better next time because mitigation measures are outdated and disaster management remains nonexistent.