Book Review
Rating: 7/10
India recently observed 6th
anniversary of the unfortunate event of 26th November, 2008 when
just 10 terrorists from across the border had held the world’s fourth largest
city to ransom. We looked back at the incident when innocent families at CST
were shot dead by Ajmal Kasab, who somehow became the face of those attacks –
the attacks on India. However, the most shocking picture from that attack was
the one with the dome of the Taj Mahal Hotel set on fire.
The Seige, written by Adrian Levy
and Cathy Scott-Clark, takes back its readers to those unfortunate 68 hours
starting from the evening of 26th November, 2008. Every incident
explained in this book is a real incident from those 68 hours, and that is what
gave me goose bumps. The narrative of the story is based on the multiple interviews
with the survivors, policemen and journalists, complemented by investigation
reports and site visits. So, this is as real as it can get.
While I am not a great fan of the
writing style of the authors who have jumped between multiple characters,
incidents and places in just a few pages creating confusion, I liked the
details that they went into. The book starts with the David Headley story,
leading up to Lashkar-e-Toiba and finally to the Taj. For me, there were times
when I felt angry about the incompetence of the Indian security forces to
manage just ten rats. There were other times when I put down the book to do my
google search and reconfirm if all what I’m reading is actually true, because
it seemed to be fiction.
Overall, I liked the storyline, I
liked the research and I liked the detail. But I think it could’ve been a little
less confusing at times, and that it would have gone a little beyond just
stating the facts and incidents.
-Arun Sharma
Originally published at http://whynothavefun.wordpress.com/
Check my other book reviews here.
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Originally published at http://whynothavefun.wordpress.com/
Check my other book reviews here.
Check my Goodreads account.