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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Vaseem KhanPublisher: Hodder & Stoughton Imprint: Hodder & Stoughton Dimensions: Width: 16.40cm , Height: 3.60cm , Length: 23.60cm Weight: 0.616kg ISBN: 9781529341102ISBN 10: 1529341108 Pages: 384 Publication Date: 18 August 2022 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsReviewsHard, realistic and fascinatingly hard to decipher. Persis is a terrific character * On Magazine * Vaseem Khan's friction-free ascent to pole position in historical crime is consolidated by The Lost Man of Bombay. Much to relish here * Financial Times * What should you expect from a good historical mystery? Well, a decent mystery, obviously, and interesting characters to guide you through the plot, plus some inside knowledge of a place or period in history you are unfamiliar with. The Lost Man of Bombay by Vaseem Khan ticks all those boxes, and probably more, with ease * SHOTS * The hugely entertaining result is not unlike an India(na) Jones adventure: history and mystery mixed with brutal slapstick, thwarted romance and sly humour . . . Malabar House is a subcontinental version of Mick Herron's Slough House . . . If only all period procedurals were as good as this * The Times * Khan writes with a charming formality and brings his characters and their dilemmas to life in this intelligent and intriguing series * Literary Review * Hard, realistic and fascinatingly hard to decipher. Persis is a terrific character * On Magazine * Vaseem Khan's friction-free ascent to pole position in historical crime is consolidated by The Lost Man of Bombay. Much to relish here * Financial Times * What should you expect from a good historical mystery? Well, a decent mystery, obviously, and interesting characters to guide you through the plot, plus some inside knowledge of a place or period in history you are unfamiliar with. The Lost Man of Bombay by Vaseem Khan ticks all those boxes, and probably more, with ease * SHOTS * The hugely entertaining result is not unlike an India(na) Jones adventure: history and mystery mixed with brutal slapstick, thwarted romance and sly humour . . . Malabar House is a subcontinental version of Mick Herron's Slough House . . . If only all period procedurals were as good as this * The Times * Khan writes with a charming formality and brings his characters and their dilemmas to life in this intelligent and intriguing series * Literary Review * British writer Vaseem Khan has shown quite comprehensively that he can write historical crime fiction well * Asian Media Group * The latest of Khan's excellent thrillers set in post-war Bombay is a vivid portrait of a society remaking itself in the new era of independence * Mail on Sunday * Hard, realistic and fascinatingly hard to decipher. Persis is a terrific character * On Magazine * Vaseem Khan's friction-free ascent to pole position in historical crime is consolidated by The Lost Man of Bombay. Much to relish here * Financial Times * What should you expect from a good historical mystery? Well, a decent mystery, obviously, and interesting characters to guide you through the plot, plus some inside knowledge of a place or period in history you are unfamiliar with. The Lost Man of Bombay by Vaseem Khan ticks all those boxes, and probably more, with ease * SHOTS * The hugely entertaining result is not unlike an India(na) Jones adventure: history and mystery mixed with brutal slapstick, thwarted romance and sly humour . . . Malabar House is a subcontinental version of Mick Herron's Slough House . . . If only all period procedurals were as good as this * The Times * Khan writes with a charming formality and brings his characters and their dilemmas to life in this intelligent and intriguing series * Literary Review * British writer Vaseem Khan has shown quite comprehensively that he can write historical crime fiction well * Asian Media Group * The latest of Khan's excellent thrillers set in post-war Bombay is a vivid portrait of a society remaking itself in the new era of independence * Mail on Sunday * A brilliant whodunnit mingling fascinating history, the flavours of India and a Himalayan blizzard of clues * The Sun * Vaseem Khan doesn't only spin a fast-moving, well-plotted story; he deftly illuminates the religious rivalries that beset post-colonial India. Think Mick Herron in Bombay: inventive characterisation made laugh-aloud funny by Maya Saroya's pacey, often caustic narration * The Times, Audiobook of the Week * Hard, realistic and fascinatingly hard to decipher. Persis is a terrific character * On Magazine * Vaseem Khan's friction-free ascent to pole position in historical crime is consolidated by The Lost Man of Bombay. Much to relish here * Financial Times * What should you expect from a good historical mystery? Well, a decent mystery, obviously, and interesting characters to guide you through the plot, plus some inside knowledge of a place or period in history you are unfamiliar with. The Lost Man of Bombay by Vaseem Khan ticks all those boxes, and probably more, with ease * SHOTS * The hugely entertaining result is not unlike an India(na) Jones adventure: history and mystery mixed with brutal slapstick, thwarted romance and sly humour . . . Malabar House is a subcontinental version of Mick Herron's Slough House . . . If only all period procedurals were as good as this * The Times * Khan writes with a charming formality and brings his characters and their dilemmas to life in this intelligent and intriguing series * Literary Review * British writer Vaseem Khan has shown quite comprehensively that he can write historical crime fiction well * Asian Media Group * The latest of Khan's excellent thrillers set in post-war Bombay is a vivid portrait of a society remaking itself in the new era of independence * Mail on Sunday * A brilliant whodunnit mingling fascinating history, the flavours of India and a Himalayan blizzard of clues * The Sun * Vaseem Khan doesn't only spin a fast-moving, well-plotted story; he deftly illuminates the religious rivalries that beset post-colonial India. Think Mick Herron in Bombay: inventive characterisation made laugh-aloud funny by Maya Saroya's pacey, often caustic narration * The Times, Audiobook of the Week * Vivid, bracing crime writing married to a picture of a country seeking its post Raj identity * Financial Times, Books of the Year 2022 * Vaseem Khan's excellent series set in post-partition India * Guardian, Best Crime & Thrillers of 2022 * Written with wit and heart, it's wonderfully entertaining * Daily Express, Books of the Year * His excellent Malabar House series * The Critic * The best historical thriller of the year * Daily Express * If only all period procedurals were as good as this * The Times * Author InformationVaseem Khan's acclaimed Baby Ganesh Agency crime series won the Shamus Award in the US, with The Unexpected Inheritance of Inspector Chopra selected by the Sunday Times as one of the 40 best crime novels published 2015-2020, now translated into 16 languages. The first novel in the Malabar House series, Midnight at Malabar House, won the CWA Historical Dagger 2021 and was shortlisted for the Theakstons Crime Novel of the Year Award. Vaseem lives in London. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |