The Garage
March 26, 2011 AUTHOR: zachary CATEGORIES: Reading List Tags: ,

Maximum City: Bombay Lost and Found

Cinematographer Doug Emmett suggested Maximum City to me when I gave him a quick pitch about the Gatecrashers. It was right on. Thanks Doug.  I can highly recommend this book.

This is what the  The New Yorker had to say:

Modern Bombay is home to fourteen million people, two-thirds of them packed into neighborhoods where the population density reaches one million per square mile. Its official name is now Mumbai, but, as the author points out, the city has always had “multiple aliases, as do gangsters and whores.” Mehta, who lived there as a child, has a penchant for the city’s most “morally compromised” inhabitants: the young Hindu mafiosi who calmly recollect burning Muslims alive during riots twelve years ago; the crooked policeman who stages “encounter killings” of hoods whose usefulness has expired; the bar girl, adorned with garlands of rupees, whose arms are scarred from suicide attempts. Mehta’s brutal portrait of urban life derives its power from intimacy with his subjects. After clandestine meetings with some of Bombay’s most wanted assassins, he notes, “I know their real names, what they like to eat, how they love, what their precise relationship is with God.”
Copyright © 2005 The New Yorker

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This background image is concept art for District 99, aka Rivertown. The artwork was done by Sutu, who created the award-winning web series NAWLZ.

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