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Mrs D'Silva's Detective Instincts and the Shaitan of CalcuttaGlen Peters View more titles by 'Glen Peters'
ISBN: 9781906998011 (1906998019)Publication Date June 2009
Publisher: Parthian Books, Aberteifi
Format: Paperback, 216x142 mm, 334 pages Language: English Available Our Price: £8.99 
Mrs D'Silva's Detective Instincts and the Shaitan of Calcutta
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Mrs D'Silva teaches at Don Bosco's Catholic school in Calcutta. She was brought up by the nuns of St Mary's when her mother died and now, only thirty two years of age, she is already a young widow with a son to care for. This life has a lot in store for Mrs D'Silva.

Athrawes mewn ysgol Gatholig yn Calcutta yw Mrs D'Silva. Fe'i magwyd gan leianod Eglwys y Santes Fair wedi i'w mam farw. Bellach, mae hi'n 32 mlwydd oed, yn wraig weddw ac yn fam i fachgen bach. Mae 'na dipyn o bethau o'i blaen.
Glen Peters, who was born in Allahabad and spent his early childhood living in a railway colony near Calcutta, has drawn on childhood memories and the stories of his youth to weave a tale that is part murder mystery, part romance, and part commentary on the social and political upheavals that affected post-colonial India during the 1950s and 1960s.

When a group of Anglo-Indians go for their annual picnic at the shrine of Our Lady, their enjoyment of the communal feast is spoiled when Joan D’Silva’s ten-year-old son Errol discovers the partially decomposed body of a woman at the edge of the river. The body is identified as being that of Agnes, a young woman who has been married off to a much older man who is alleged to be a homosexual and part-time pimp. Unwilling to see her death dismissed as suicide or misadventure, Agnes’s friends beg the widowed Joan to use her influence as a respected schoolteacher to help investigate what they believe to be a murder. Bravely or foolhardily, Joan agrees.

I love the intimate portrayal of the Anglo-Indian community and its absurd internal hierarchy (“the Shroves [...] considered themselves superior Anglo-Indians because they were by far the whitest”), the insights into the workings and corruption of independent India’s struggling new institutions, the recipes, and a title to die for. Joan D’Silva comes across as an engaging fusion of Precious Ramotswe and Anna Leonowens, and the tangential foray into her family history is the stuff of another book in its own right – please, Mr Peters.

Suzy Ceulan Hughes

It is possible to use this review for promotional purposes, but the following acknowledgment should be included: A review from www.gwales.com, with the permission of the Welsh Books Council.

Gellir defnyddio'r adolygiad hwn at bwrpas hybu, ond gofynnir i chi gynnwys y gydnabyddiaeth ganlynol: Adolygiad oddi ar www.gwales.com, trwy ganiatâd Cyngor Llyfrau Cymru.
Author Biography:
Glen Peters was born in Allahabad India and spent most of his school years in a suburb of Calcutta. His family emigrated to the UK in the late 60’s where he completed his university education. He was President of his Student’s Union for a year and then worked as an engineer with British Gas for a number of years before he joined Price Waterhouse in London. He has been with the firm for 25 years and was made a partner in 1988. In 1995 he and his wife purchased a rundown mansion in Pembrokeshire which started a love affair with West Wales. He founded Project Rhosygilwen in 2006 which aims to use the arts as an engine of rural regeneration.
Further Information:
Mrs D’Silva teaches at Don Bosco’s Catholic school in Calcutta. She was brought up by the nuns of St Mary’s when her mother died and now only thirty two years of age is already a young widow with a son to care for. This life has a lot in store for Mrs D’Silva.

Calcutta in 1960 is a city striving to change. The old rulers have gone home but India is still trying to find its own way towards a peaceful, prosperous future. The world is changing and pressing in on the new country, there is a battle with the Chinese in the mountains to the north while the communists want to take over at home, in Bengal.

Mrs D’Silva wants to be part of the New India, the new Kolkata. She likes the coffee houses of Chowringhee Road and the dances at the Grand Hotel. She likes her work at Don Bosco’s especially the new science teacher from Darjeeling. She even likes her pupils. Which is why she is so shocked when the body of Agnes (surname), a former student, is discovered washed up in the marshes of the Hooghly river. And then another student, a close friend of Agnes, is charged with the murder of a factory manager in a riot started by a Maoist faction of the Workers Revolutionary Party of Bengal and what a group of goondas they are, led by that saitan, Dutta. The same Dutta running rings around Inspector Basu, who has been forced into investigating both cases and is getting nowhere fast. The same Inspector Basu who has two sons at Don Bosco’s.

It’s all a bit of a badmash until Mrs D’Silva discovers her detective instincts.

In a hugely enjoyable read, Glen Peters recaptures the tastes and atmospheres of his youth in 1960s India with a vivid and engaging novel of recipes and murder, romance and intrigue.

*************

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Prizes:
Mrs D’Silva’s Detective Instincts and the Shaitan of Calcutta has made the July 2009 short-list for the People’s Book Prize. The prize is dedicated to discovering new talent from independent publishers and it asks the public to vote on their website, encouraging them to borrow the title from the library or to buy. Beryl Bainbridge is the figurehead.
Last Updated on 16 June 2009
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