Three people—Santha Wrench's father, her lover, and an Indian agent—try to rescue the lovely half-Indian woman from the ancient Thuggee death cult that believes her to be the link between a violent past and the present and forces her to participate in its vile rites.
An odd, but a neat book by Giroux, and the third book in just a month that I read which employed Hinduism and Kali as the main trope. This is a very difficult book to review given its subject matter and presentation, but basically, the story centers on a revival of 'thuggie' in India in the 1970s. 'Thugs' were a mysterious Kali cult in India who killed and robbed their victims and then buried the remains. Thugs would only kill via strangulation with a particular silk scarf; shedding blood during the kill was seen to potentially bring on the wrath of Kali. While the thugs were stamped out under the Raj, a new leader has arisen/been chosen and the thugs are active once again.
The Rishi has an interesting set of characters, with the lead being an aging police inspector in India (Rama) who works on special cases. Through tips and luck, he manages to capture some thugs and via a spy among them, learns about the new spiritual leader of them. The thing is, the thugs are relocating to the USA to start their mayhem afresh. The police inspector has an old friend in Boston, a fellow Indian who worked in the OSS in India during WWII and now works in some unspecified position for spooks in D.C. Rama is forced to flee India to get away from Indira Gandhi's crack-downs and arrives in Boston only to find out that the thugs preceded him!
This is a long and complicated story, but Rama's old buddy has a daughter who is gradually being possessed by Kali. There is a lot of Hindu spiritualism in this book, somewhat heavy handed at times, but it fits with the fascination of the Indian mystique so prevalent in the 1970s, even though the book was written it the 1980s. After a rather slow start, the book picks up speed and keeps going right to the end. Can Rama and his buddy save his daughter? Maybe with some help from a swami that just happens to be in Boston as well. 3 stars.
This is a relaxing sort of fun read, until it gets into the final part. In the final part of the book, it takes off and hammers relentlessly right up to the last page. It’s not a terrifying book by any stretch, but it does sustain its suspense and vigour admirably throughout the book.
The author was my grandfather absolutely fantastic interesting man. Really did a lot of research for this book went to India a hand full of times. I'm so happy the book is still being read! Miss him like crazy he passed away a long time ago..