I had an unfavourable opinion of Mr Jacob Thomas, my impression of him being that of an attention-seeking officer. Opinions of other officers/politicians (like Mr Sen Kumar), my general dislike for people who tend to act holier than thou, as well as the antics (in my opinion) he displayed on TV were what contributed to my judgement.
It is because of this that I read his biography cautiously (so as to not fall for a biased narrative). However, It appears that my impression of him was thoroughly unfair. I found his biography more honest than most, one where he did not blow his own trumpet. His is an interesting read into the life of an interesting civil servant.
Mr Jacob Thomas is a highly qualified professional-He qualified for a graduate programme in the USA with a scholarship, was offered a lucrative private job, even qualified for the Central Agricultural Services with the first rank, and got his PhD (in Agronomy?) by the time he joined IPS or so. He also obtained a second PhD in Management. He was also awarded the Sword of Honour of his IPS batch (which is only mentioned as a photo caption.)
According to his book, he was able to perform well in most positions he served. He doubled the annual revenue of Supplyco during his tenure as well as turned around organisations like the Kerala State Film Development Corporation, among others.
The book narrates his childhood, has snippets of his postings (in non-chronological order), the challenges he faced in each posting, and the improvements he could bring about or initiatives he could introduce, the criticisms they got, as well as how he handled them, and his responses to those criticisms.
The book also covers his defence against the allegations against him (His defence is satisfactory in my opinion), his idea of a corruption-free and developed society, as well as his honest views of some political leaders (briefly here and there), and his idea of a better future and society.
There are a couple of interesting incidents, a funny interview story, some dark (and brief) experiences as part of policing Job or an Incident during the anti-Sikh riots which is what he says motivated him to take a strict position in his tenure as the chief of Fire and Rescue Service. Thinking again, I believe his was the right position, though high handed it might have seemed.
There are passing references to the moral integrity of some High Court Judges, Lok Ayuktas etc. which need reading between the lines due to obvious reasons.
I felt the book could have been edited better at some points, a good read nonetheless. (For people who are confused, the appendix has the chronology of his appointments).