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The books covers the politician landscape of Indian Central Government and Andhra Pradesh from before Independence to 1980. Te book will tell you about what everyone thought but no the leader who made the decision thought. So crafty is Rao that he book will tell you all happenings around Indira Gandhi, without telling us about why she took the decision she took. The book exposes to some extent the depth of hypocrisies in Indian Politics. Some suggest the de A masterpiece by the master politician.
The books covers the politician landscape of Indian Central Government and Andhra Pradesh from before Independence to 1980. Te book will tell you about what everyone thought but no the leader who made the decision thought. So crafty is Rao that he book will tell you all happenings around Indira Gandhi, without telling us about why she took the decision she took. The book exposes to some extent the depth of hypocrisies in Indian Politics. Some suggest the depth of malaise is slightly exaggerated, which might be true.But in the end, it changes your perspective about politics. ...more
The twists and turns of Human nature, the power politics. How can one person stand on his ideology, when every one is against him.
a thoughful leader.
Why this lengthy preface to a review on an autobiographical novel penned by former Prime Minister the late P V Narasimha Rao? You shall see why when you read the book. Without spoiling it for you - and in any case I believe the book will appeal more to people who have read up on Rao's background - let me just say that the book brings out the problems involved in crusading against 'the system' in India. The system may have taken the form of landlords in an earlier agri-dominated era; today it takes the form of industrialists. But a somewhat feudalistic and elitist system (some may argue that somewhat is an understatement!), nevertheless. Then as now, an all powerful Prime Minister who promised radical change and a clean break with the status quo developed cold feet and sacrificed his/her strongest ally in the fight he/she had promised to fight.
This in my view is the essence of The Insider. It is NOT about liberalisation, be warned. Which does not make it any less interesting. And Rao's wonderful style, his dry wit bringing LeCarre to mind at times, makes this gargantuan 800 pager a breezy read.
A question that troubled me throughout the book and still haunts me is what happened overnight to the freedom fighters - many of whom populated governments at the Centre as well as States at the time - due to which they lost sight of the nation building project that a few like Nehru were very much focused on? I understand the onset of cynicism among subsequent generations but the book does not, to my mind, explain the reasons behind the metamorphosis of those fervent patriots who valiantly fought for our independence. Or perhaps it does and I need to read it one more time to locate the answer.
As you can see, this is not a criticism of the book but an indication of the depth of the issues it raises. It does not matter whether Rao was right about what all he wrote in this epic or whether he was entirely biased and intent on decorating himself. What matters is the questions he raised therein remain pertinent and unresolved in a country that moans for change but is generally quick to bury the lone crusader who dares to be the change. With the exception of Gandhi but hey we shot him dead too!
...moreMacro events in the country such as the 1962 war with China,etc are described by stating the obvious. The book (pages which are not never-ending conversations) remain on the surface. The author sways between super macro highlight of events and super micro detailing of conversations, and the reader is left with a deep sense of wanting in the middle. By staying on the surface of political history, he defies the expectations of the reader who expects the novel to be true to its title. The novel is an out-and-out drag. One can easily skip lines or paragraphs and even pages and not lose the plot at all. ...more
Certain references of how people use to coexist, despite of their difference and how harmony prevailed for the simple reason that common people have common aspirations and nothing more, are so apt even for today's India.
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Chaudhury became an expert in the nauseating art of political make-up.
He learned how to mouth his party's ideology ritually and endlessly, without believing a word of it."
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Source: https://www.goodreads.com/en/book/show/7103074
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