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Bribery, Corruption Also

Bribery, Corruption Also

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Author: H. R. F. Keating
Publisher: St Martins Pr
Category: Book

List Price: £16.37
Buy Used: £3.09
You Save: £13.28 (81%)



Used (9) from £3.09

Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 3 reviews

Media: Hardcover
Pages: 256
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 9 x 6 x 1

ISBN: 0312205023
Dewey Decimal Number: 823.914
EAN: 9780312205027
ASIN: 0312205023

Publication Date: August 1999
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Dispatched from the US -- Expect delivery in 2-3 weeks. Former Library book. Shows some signs of wear, and may have some markings on the inside. 100% Money Back Guarantee. Shipped to over one million happy customers! Your purchase benefits world literacy!

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - Bribery, Corruption Also (An Inspector Ghote novel)
  • Audio CD - Bribery, Corruption Also
  • Hardcover - Bribery, Corruption Also
  • Audio Cassette - Bribery, Corruption Also: Complete & Unabridged
  • Hardcover - Bribery, Corruption Also (Inspector Ghote Mystery)

Similar Items:

  • The Perfect Murder (Inspector Ghote Mystery)
  • Breaking and Entering (Inspector Ghote Mystery)
  • Inspector Ghote Plays a Joker: Complete & Unabridged (Death)
  • Inspector Ghote Goes by Train: Complete & Unabridged
  • Inspector Ghote's First Case

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.co.uk Review
This much-loved series about a Bombay police inspector has survived the opinion of some readers that the Peter Sellers-ish idiom of the hero is a bit patronizing. The reason is perhaps the solid embattled decency of Keating's Inspector Ghote--his occasional failures to get things quite right and his dignity and diligence give the books a charm that outweighs the faded joke of his fractured English. Here he is, as occasionally before, a fish out of water--his Bengali wife has inherited a house and small fortune in Calcutta, and he is faced with the awful prospect of leaving his hometown for good. And, of course, there are dirty doings involved--the lawyer who Mrs. Ghote's late uncle trusted is pursuing agendas of his own, and, wherever they turn in this strange town, they are liable to find themselves deceived and betrayed. They wander around Calcutta, seeing its sights and meeting a rogue's gallery of the untrustworthy and villainous; and their occasional personal lapses rebound on them in awful ways. A bleakly funny book, this is a cry of despair about the abandonment of old ways, in which the puzzles and the adventures are secondary.--Roz Kaveney


Customer Reviews:

3 out of 5 stars Bombay's Away!   July 1, 2004
Donald Mitchell (Boston)
3 out of 3 found this review helpful

Bribery, Corruption Also is my least favorite of the novels in the distinguished series concerning the Bombay police detective, Inspector Ghote. Unless you feel compelled to read every book in the series, you can skip this one.

The book opens as Inspector Ghote and his wife, Protima, are flying to Calcutta. Protima has unexpectedly inherited an estate from a distant relative. She remembers the house and land fondly from her youth, and is determined to move to Calcutta so that the Ghotes can retire there on her inheritance. Having come from Calcutta originally, she rhapsodizes about the many wonders of Calcutta. Everything is better or bigger there than anywhere else.

This sets up a nice tension, because Inspector Ghote loves his native Bombay and his police work there. He has no interest in moving to Calcutta, but doesn't want to spoil his wife's joy.

Upon arrival, they decide to visit the house on their own before the appointed trip planned with the estate's lawyer. Complications begin to develop at this point.

With such a fine set-up, you would expect there to be a wonderful mystery. Actually, the mystery isn't very mysterious. The detection is also pretty simple. That would be all right, but the story development is mostly about endless visits to Calcutta tourist spots, descriptions of the superiority of Calcutta over all other cities, and endless attempts by those in Calcutta to obtain bribes.

Mr. Keating's purpose in the book seems to be to write a morality tale about the dangers that even petty bribery can bring. Everyone in the book finds it more practical to pay bribes from time to time to get some short-term advantage than to play by the rules. When you do that, you become tarred by corruption and inevitably are harmed.

But the book doesn't quite work. Instead, the story's apparent lesson seems to be that if Inspector Ghote had avoided investigating, all would have been much better. That seems to suggest that sticking your head in the sand is the best policy when you spot something fishy, even if you are a police official.

I listened to the audio tapes of this book, which are read by the author, Mr. H.R.F. Keating. I enjoyed the sound of his voice in creating the accents of the characters. I will remember those accents with pleasure when I reread books in the series.

If you decide to read this book, think about where you may be succumbing to the temptation to cut moral boundaries in search of a momentary advantage. Do you think it's wise to continue?


3 out of 5 stars Bombay's Away!   June 21, 2004
Donald Mitchell (Boston)
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Bribery, Corruption Also is my least favorite of the novels in the distinguished series concerning the Bombay police detective, Inspector Ghote. Unless you feel compelled to read every book in the series, you can skip this one.

The book opens as Inspector Ghote and his wife, Protima, are flying to Calcutta. Protima has unexpectedly inherited an estate from a distant relative. She remembers the house and land fondly from her youth, and is determined to move to Calcutta so that the Ghotes can retire there on her inheritance. Having come from Calcutta originally, she rhapsodizes about the many wonders of Calcutta. Everything is better or bigger there than anywhere else.

This sets up a nice tension, because Inspector Ghote loves his native Bombay and his police work there. He has no interest in moving to Calcutta, but doesn't want to spoil his wife's joy.

Upon arrival, they decide to visit the house on their own before the appointed trip planned with the estate's lawyer. Complications begin to develop at this point.

With such a fine set-up, you would expect there to be a wonderful mystery. Actually, the mystery isn't very mysterious. The detection is also pretty simple. That would be all right, but the story development is mostly about endless visits to Calcutta tourist spots, descriptions of the superiority of Calcutta over all other cities, and endless attempts by those in Calcutta to obtain bribes.

Mr. Keating's purpose in the book seems to be to write a morality tale about the dangers that even petty bribery can bring. Everyone in the book finds it more practical to pay bribes from time to time to get some short-term advantage than to play by the rules. When you do that, you become tarred by corruption and inevitably are harmed.

But the book doesn't quite work. Instead, the story's apparent lesson seems to be that if Inspector Ghote had avoided investigating, all would have been much better. That seems to suggest that sticking your head in the sand is the best policy when you spot something fishy, even if you are a police official.

I listened to the audio tapes of this book, which are read by the author, Mr. H.R.F. Keating. I enjoyed the sound of his voice in creating the accents of the characters. I will remember those accents with pleasure when I reread books in the series.

If you decide to read this book, think about where you may be succumbing to the temptation to cut moral boundaries in search of a momentary advantage. Do you think it's wise to continue?


3 out of 5 stars Bombay's Away!   May 3, 2004
Donald Mitchell (Boston)
3 out of 3 found this review helpful

Bribery, Corruption Also is my least favorite of the novels in the distinguished series concerning the Bombay police detective, Inspector Ghote. Unless you feel compelled to read every book in the series, you can skip this one.

The book opens as Inspector Ghote and his wife, Protima, are flying to Calcutta. Protima has unexpectedly inherited an estate from a distant relative. She remembers the house and land fondly from her youth, and is determined to move to Calcutta so that the Ghotes can retire there on her inheritance. Having come from Calcutta originally, she rhapsodizes about the many wonders of Calcutta. Everything is better or bigger there than anywhere else.

This sets up a nice tension, because Inspector Ghote loves his native Bombay and his police work there. He has no interest in moving to Calcutta, but doesn't want to spoil his wife's joy.

Upon arrival, they decide to visit the house on their own before the appointed trip planned with the estate's lawyer. What they find is a rundown mess filled with immigrant squatters. While there, they meet the next-door neighbor who bewails the fact that Protima's relative had been unwilling to sell while the property still had some value.

But no matter! Protima decides that she will oust the squatters, repair the house, and move in. When the lawyer arrives, he tries to talk her out of that . . . and mentions that he has a buyer for the property. But why would anyone want to buy it? During the conversation, the lawyer contradicts what the neighbor has said about Protima's relative not wanting to sell. That puts Inspector Ghote on his guard. Soon he finds more contradictions, especially when the lawyer tries to avoid advancing any money from the estate to Protima.

Deeply annoyed that someone may be trying to hoodwink his wife, Inspector Ghote finds himself working at cross-purposes to his own desire to return to Bombay as he unravels the mystery.

With such a fine set-up, you would expect there to be a wonderful mystery. Actually, the mystery isn't very mysterious. The detection is also pretty simple. That would be all right, but the story development is mostly about endless visits to Calcutta tourist spots, descriptions of the superiority of Calcutta over all other cities, and endless attempts by those in Calcutta to obtain bribes.

Mr. Keating's purpose in the book seems to be to write a morality tale about the dangers that even petty bribery can bring. Everyone in the book finds it more practical to pay bribes from time to time to get some short-term advantage than to play by the rules. When you do that, you become tarred by corruption and inevitably are harmed.

But the book doesn't quite work. Instead, the story's apparent lesson seems to be that if Inspector Ghote had avoided investigating, all would have been much better. That seems to suggest that sticking your head in the sand is the best policy when you spot something fishy, even if you are a police official.

The book also portrays the potential for pervasive corruption on a scale that cannot be stopped. That just wasn't credible to me, even though I know little about modern India.

I listened to the audio tapes of this book, which are read by the author, Mr. H.R.F. Keating. I enjoyed the sound of his voice in creating the accents of the characters. I will remember those accents with pleasure when I reread books in the series.

If you decide to read this book, think about where you may be succumbing to the temptation to cut moral boundaries in search of a momentary advantage. Do you think it's wise to continue?

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