The Lost Flamingoes of Bombay: A Novel

The Lost Flamingoes of Bombay: A Novel

by Siddharth Dhanvant Shanghvi
The Lost Flamingoes of Bombay: A Novel

The Lost Flamingoes of Bombay: A Novel

by Siddharth Dhanvant Shanghvi

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Overview

When photographer Karan Seth comes to Bombay intent on immortalizing a city charged by celebrity and sensation, he is instantly drawn in by its allure and cruelty. Along the way, he discovers unlikely allies: Samar , an eccentric pianist; Zaira, the reclusive queen of Bollywood; and Rhea, a married woman who seduces Karan into a tender but twisted affair. But when an unexpected tragedy strikes, the four lives are irreparably torn apart. Flung into a Fitzgeraldian world of sex, crime and collusion, Karan learns that what the heart sees the mind's eye may never behold. Siddharth Dhanvant Shanghvi's The Lost Flamingoes of Bombay is a razor sharp chronicle of four friends caught in modern India 's tidal wave of uneven prosperity and political failure. It's also a profoundly moving meditation on love's betrayal and the redemptive powers of friendship.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781429943796
Publisher: St. Martin's Publishing Group
Publication date: 10/12/2010
Sold by: Macmillan
Format: eBook
Pages: 368
File size: 442 KB

About the Author

Siddharth Dhanvant Shanghvi's debut novel, The Last Song of Dusk, won the Betty Trask Award in the UK, the Premio Grinzane Cavour in Italy, and was nominated for the IMPAC Prize in Ireland. The Lost Flamingoes of Bombay was shortlisted for the Man Asian Literary Prize 2008 and was a number one bestseller in India. His work has been translated into fourteen languages. He lives in Bombay.


Siddharth Dhanvant Shanghvi's debut novel, The Last Song of Dusk, won the Betty Trask Award in the UK, the Premio Grinzane Cavour in Italy, and was nominated for the IMPAC Prize in Ireland. The Lost Flamingoes of Bombay was shortlisted for the Man Asian Literary Prize 2008 and was a number one bestseller in India. His work has been translated into fourteen languages. He lives in Bombay.

Read an Excerpt

The Lost Flamingoes of Bombay


By Siddharth Dhanvant Shanghvi

St. Martin's Press

Copyright © 2009 Siddharth Dhanvant Shanghvi
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-4299-4379-6


CHAPTER 1

'Oh God, Iqbal,' Karan Seth said, looking warily at his boss, 'you sound like you're setting me up for trouble.'

'Trouble is good for character building, Karan.'

'Character building is too much work.'

'I'm asking you to photograph a subject whom most other photographers on the team would give an arm and a leg to shoot,' Iqbal said impatiently.

Karan grinned. 'You picked me because I'm junior on your team and wouldn't have the guts to say no.'

'Well, I'm glad you see the light.'

Iqbal Syed and Karan Seth were sitting across from each other at a long cafeteria table; two glass mugs of cutting chai freed tendrils of steam between them. Copies of the magazine they both worked for — The India Chronicle — were scattered over the length of the table.

'The story is on musicians who were once world famous but have now fallen off the grid,' Iqbal said. 'I want you to photograph the pianist Samar Arora.'

Karan looked blankly at Iqbal. Who was Samar Arora?

Gauging his puzzled expression, Iqbal added, 'After graduating from Juilliard, around fifteen, maybe sixteen years ago, Samar performed at his first concert. He was twelve, or some such ridiculous age. The New York Times declared that a new star had arrived. Samar produced many hit records and performed at countless concerts to standing ovations. And then, without a word of warning, he quit.' After a pause, Iqbal added, 'At the ripe old age of twenty-five. Three years ago.'

'Why did he do that?'

'No one knows; I doubt he himself does. But you can see why Samar would be a fantastic subject for this feature.'

'Yes, he would be perfect for the story but why do you want me to photograph Samar?'

'You're both in your twenties; it's likely you'll capture a side of Samar the seniors in the team may miss.'

Iqbal did not tell Karan that the real reason for his choice was that never before had he hired a junior photographer who had come to the desk almost fully formed: Karan had consistently delivered eloquent, powerful pictures, with unsaid things trembling at their corners; his work possessed the dazzling throb of permanence. Iqbal admired the oblique humour and elegant restraint in Karan's pictures; of course, he would need time, and experience, for the raw, ferocious energy of his oeuvre to discover wholeness and patience, but fate had sent him out with a deck aflush with aces.

Although swamped with assignments, Karan figured that photographing a formerly famous pianist would be a breeze. 'I'll set up something with Samar Arora.'

'You might be getting ahead of yourself,' Iqbal cautioned. 'After retiring, Samar hasn't agreed to a single interview.'

'I could always request his agent.'

Iqbal sipped on his chai. 'He doesn't have an agent since he no longer performs.'

'What if I wrote to his record company and requested a one-off meeting? I could assure them that Samar would have the right to choose the pictures he wanted to see in print.'

'It won't make a difference. After moving to Bombay a few years ago he's been a bit of a hermit. Although, when Samar does step out, he paints the town every shade of red and people talk about it for days.'

To their shared dismay, they were assailed at this point by the fluted voice of Natasha, the magazine's fashion editor. She settled her plump, provocative derrière on the chair next to Karan; the new kid on the block had caught her eye at the water cooler the previous week.

Karan, however, had been avoiding Natasha from his first day on the job because she proudly sashayed around the office with a crocodile-skin clutch, as if announcing how she had thoughtfully rescued a poor reptile from the terrifying obscurity of the swamp.

'I've met Samar,' she said after enquiring what the two men had been discussing. 'At a party in Bandra; he was guzzling Bellinis on the roof of the mansion, his best friend in tow.'

Karan tilted his head. 'On the roof?'

'One drink too many and he'd have come rolling down like squirrel shit.' Natasha ran her predatory fingers through her bright blonde highlights. 'Apparently, Samar claims the low temperature on the rooftop after midnight does his complexion a world of good. At one party he had to be rescued by firemen, ladders, the whole shebang; most Bombaywallas think he's one pretentious prick.'

'Who is his best friend?' Karan asked, in the hope that the person might provide a lead to reaching the eccentric pianist.

'Zaira, of the movies. I styled her shoot for our last issue. So beautiful she's single-handedly responsible for raising India's National Masturbation Index.'

'The nation's biggest film star is Samar's best friend.' Karan shook his head. All of a sudden, his proposed subject was not just another comet whizzing by in a distant galaxy of enigmatic failures. 'So, why was Zaira on the roof with him?'

'So they could be smug together! One is famous; the other is notorious; they're joined at the hip. Y'know how it is: birdbrains of a feather ...'

Karan sighed. He was new to Bombay — he had lived in the city only a few months — and Natasha exuded that odious, imperious indifference sired by snarkiness. He was not immune to its discouraging effects.

'How do you propose I get hold of Samar for my assignment?'

'Why don't you try waiting outside his house?' Iqbal suggested.

'And jump him when he steps out!' Glee dripped out of Natasha like precum.

'I'm sorry I can't be more helpful.' Iqbal rose to leave. 'And since you have a deadline that cannot be missed, get on with it.' He strode off, winking at Karan, who looked stricken at the prospect of being left unchaperoned in Natasha's clutches.

'I will.'

Karan turned to Natasha. 'What a pity Samar no longer does the media.'

Natasha touched Karan's arm and intoned in a voice laced with suggestion, 'Luckily, I'm a firm believer in doing the media.'

'In that case,' Karan said as he picked up his camera and slung it over his shoulder, 'you should get going, too; you have a lot of ground to cover.'

The young man's sharp, watchful face, his deep-set auburn eyes, the swathe of jet-black hair and defined jawline continued to excite Natasha even after he had walked out of the line of her vision. For a little hick out of Shimla, she thought in the glowering light of his rebuff, he's got a lot of cheek. But let's see how far it gets him in a city that'll chew him and spit him out like he's a sliver of supari.


For the next two weeks Karan tried but failed to get hold of Samar. Calls to Samar's cottage on Worli Seaface went unanswered. As Iqbal had told him, there was no agent to set up a meeting. He had to write off the Zaira lead too as it would mean he would have to cosy up to Natasha for Zaira's coordinates. As the days went by, his dejection at failing to contact Samar was compounded by fear; Iqbal repeatedly asked for the photos and Karan wasn't ready to let his mentor down.

One night, a week before the deadline, Karan was ruminating on the fact that he had come to Bombay in search of images that would reveal its most sublime, secret stories; instead, here he was, single and sleepless, busting a vein on a paparazzo job. He knew his desire to document Bombay was not wholly unique but perhaps his hunger had an original worth, an intensity powered by ravenous curiosity and a quality that was a lot like compassion but without its air of moral conceit. How many others, he thought, had come to the city with a dark, delicious dream in their pocket and four thousand rupees in the bank? And how many others had found their passion exchanged for indifference, even resentment?

His mood was darkening by the minute when Iqbal rang him to say that he had just got word that Samar Arora had been spotted at the city's most cunning joint, Gatsby. Although exhausted, Karan bolted up; it was like the moment in a rave when people are no longer dancing to or against the beat of the music but into it, the currents of bass and tune raging through their body and into the spirit. Not bothering to change out of his crumpled white tee-shirt and torn blue jeans, he raced down the stairs of his rental in Ban Ganga, made it to the main road, flagged a taxi and begged the driver to get him to Colaba in less than ten minutes: he didn't want to get to the restaurant only to be told that Samar Arora had left the building. As he adjusted the lens cover over his Leica he found himself secretly hoping that Samar Arora had left the building and was, in fact, dusting a tile on the roof and drinking to the moonlight that now cast luminous bars outside the window of his taxi. What a photo that would make!

A little before 2.00 a.m., Karan reached Gatsby, tucked away at the end of sleepy old Mandalik Lane.

In front of the portal, under a big rain tree, liveried chauffeurs traded flashes of filthy gossip about their bosses, and tipsy memsahibs, smelling of their husbands' abandonment, waited for valets to pull up their fancy cars.

No sooner had Karan stepped into the restaurant than he was subsumed with unease; in his shabby clothes and his unshaven, sleepy face, he was an obvious impostor. The waiters looked on with indifference and the haughty mâitre d' eyed him as if he was going to walk right over and ask Karan to make tracks.

Karan slunk through the bubbly horde of painted faces, negotiating a jungle of expensive perfumes, vines of vetiver, marshes of musk. So as not to drown in a whirlpool of anxiety, he focussed all his attention on spotting his subject. Where was the piano man? He scanned the throng, but it was impossible not to be led astray. For here was a perma-tanned socialite with angry silver hair and narrow rapacious eyes, clanking her ivory bangles. A pack of icky corporate types, obese and bald, were surrounded by heroin-thin models with sepulchral expressions gouged with scorn. He recognized a famous film-maker, dressed in a stunning orange sarong, standing regally under the outrageous shield of a green cloth umbrella, his long wrist bent like the spout of a teapot. The music — a canvas for the assembled to spew their bon mots and display their neuroses — was electric tandava, and it washed over Karan, diluting all his worries. He imagined that the people here would never die: they would simply evaporate into the carnal smoke of the music, their loins wrapped around each other, self and sorrow abandoned to the roar of lust. His eyes coasted from one person to the next before zoning in on a small group under the wooden stairwell at the far end of the bar. Thrilled to see his elusive subject was very much around, Karan took a deep breath and readied himself for the decisive moment.

Clad in a berry-black suit, his short hair stylishly mussed up, Samar Arora was talking animatedly to Mantra Rai, the controversial columnist and author.

Mantra's hawkish face was framed by a blustery black mane. Her recently published first novel, Remembrance of Bitches Past, was the talk of the town: a tell-all-claw-all on the beau monde, which, among its many dirty divulgences, had brought to light the liaison between the city's most respected philanthropist and his fourteen-year-old niece, a fuck fest all the charity in the world could not hush up.

Leo McCormick, Samar's boyfriend, had just asked Mantra her views on the recent efforts of the right-wing government to rename the city: 'Bombay' would soon be whitewashed into 'Mumbai'.

'Mumbai is about as appealing a name for a city as Gonorrhoea,' Mantra declared. 'Besides, the change will pollute the collective public memory of "Bombay".'

Within minutes the trio had got worked up over the city's possible rechristening, and another angle was added to their debate as Priya Das, a newly elected member of Parliament, joined them.

'But Mumbai was the original name of Bombay,' Priya said stiffly, referring to the fact that the Kolis, one of the earliest communities resident in the city, had named it in honour of the goddess Mumbadevi. 'This is about claiming our past back from the colonists.'

Mantra exhaled loudly. 'Look, Priya, a woman is raped every hour in Bombay. Over half the population lives in slums. Twelve-year-olds work as whores. The trains are never on time. And my milk has funny water in it.'

'Your point being?'

'The Brits checked out some forty years ago. The past is important, but the present is crucial. Giving Bombay a new name is not going to make it any safer or cleaner.'

'But this is a resistance to authenticity!' Priya screeched.

It occurred to Mantra that Priya had a crusty librarian's voice, one that could only be relieved with a dildo. 'Authenticity?' she said. 'The Kolis called it Mumbadevi in the 1800s. If you're looking for authenticity, you'll have to dig much deeper than that. Bombay goes way back to the twelfth century.'

The heated debate was interrupted by a sudden, loud squeal of delight. 'Well, if it isn't the wonderful Samar Arora!' Editor of a fashion bible, Diya Sen, the source of the enthusiastic greeting, had long, naughty legs and a giggle as shiny as a penny in the sun. This evening she was all shimmied up in a black shift dress and a string of thick white pearls. 'My favourite pianist!' she burbled. 'Darling man, how lucky I am to cross your path.'

'I've been waiting here all my life only so you might come along,' Samar assured the slightly sloshed editor.

'I see your lovely boyfriend has graced our wicked acres ... Hello there, Mr McCormick. How's the new masterpiece coming along?'

'One page at a time,' Leo replied. 'Slow, but steady. How's your husband?'

'Oh, super!' Diya roped her arm around Samar, drawing a quizzical look from Leo. 'Except, he's no longer my husband.'

'Oh, I'm sorry ... I had no —' Leo blushed.

'Don't apologize, darling! After four years of marriage I discovered that the only thing we had in common was a mutual adoration of me — but even that wasn't enough to make me stay.' She kissed Samar on his ear, and drawled, 'I have a new man.'

'Wonderful!' Samar said. 'What does he do?'

'The Boyfriend is working on a biography of Bombay.'

'How exciting. Bombay deserves a good memoirist. Have you read any of his work in progress? I enjoy reading the first draft of Leo's writing.'

'I gave the fellow a first line for his book; it's bound to be an opus, although right now it's more pus than opus.' She made a face.

'Well, I'm sure you'll whip it into shape, Diya; your mind could mend any book.'

'I doubt we'll be together that long,' the editor confessed.

'Why toss out a talented writer?' Samar said as he ruffled Leo's hair. 'Writing prowess often extends into the bedroom.'

'Not in the case of the Boyfriend,' Diya asserted. 'But then, not every fling comes with a bling quotient, and I was raised to believe that certain kinds of charity begin in bed.'

'You're not giving your boyfriend enough of a chance.'

'When you date writers, execute your own exit routes. Otherwise, before you know it, you'll be written out of the narrative. I've got too much self-disrespect to be a closed chapter in someone else's book.'

'That's a bit harsh,' Leo said. 'Writers are not calculating; they just understand early on that efficient editing can save a straggling story.'

Diya waved her hand in the air. 'The Boyfriend is not half as much fun as what I did last week in Goa; I got my first tattoo! Want to see it?'

Priya, ever the insecure politician, not about to be outdone by a fashion journalist, raised her voice. 'I guess the whole Mumbai vs Bombay issue boils down to one thing: the privileged class vs the working class.'

'I'm a writer, and no one gets more "working class" than starving writers,' said Mantra.

'If you're so working class, what're you doing here at Gatsby?' Priya asked snidely.

'I had the sense to marry well, Priya. And to divorce better.'

'Congratulations! With that one sentence you've pushed back the women's rights movement by a whole fifty years!'

Long immune to such Bombay-brand bitchery, Mantra serenely took another sip of her whisky. 'Some of us, Priya, might believe that your birth is one helluvan argument for the pro- contraceptive movement,' she said. 'But don't you go sweating over progressive politics so early in your career.'

Diya, meanwhile, was growing impatient. 'I want to show you my tattoo. NOW!'

'Well then ...' Samar threw his hands up in the air. 'What's stopping you?'

In one quick, smart motion Diya unzipped her black dress and let it fall to her feet, where it gathered in a desultory heap. Hiking up the succulent left cheek of her butt, encased in white lacy knickers, she said, 'It's Capricorn, my star sign.'

'Gosh! I thought Capricornians were supposed to be quite old school,' Samar said. 'But you've made some giant strides from there, doll.'

'What's insulting is how the politicians never once asked us.' Mantra was still at it, though now she was trying hard to peel her eyes away from the booty on show. 'How dare they take our votes and our money and play with the name of our city without consulting us? This is no democracy! This is a land of right-wing zealots. We chucked out the whites in 1947 but what sort of fiends did we elect in their place? The Hindu People's Party, that's what.'


(Continues...)

Excerpted from The Lost Flamingoes of Bombay by Siddharth Dhanvant Shanghvi. Copyright © 2009 Siddharth Dhanvant Shanghvi. Excerpted by permission of St. Martin's Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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