India with Sanjeev Bhaskar cover art

India with Sanjeev Bhaskar

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India with Sanjeev Bhaskar

By: Sanjeev Bhaskar
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About this listen

Sanjeev Bhaskar, comedian and writer behind 'The Kumars at No. 42' embarks on an epic and highly personal journey through modern India. Sanjeev’s characteristic humour and unique perspective form the heart of this audiobook that accompanies his travels for the BBC2 series.

Exotic and diverse, richly colourful and intriguingly complex – India is one of the most exciting countries to visit in the world today. Sanjeev Bhaskar of ‘Goodness Gracious Me’ and 'The Kumars at No. 42' , grew up in 70s surburban west London, so his regular family visits to India to see his relatives gave him an endless fascination for its bizarre contradictions. Now Sanjeev is going back with a BBC film crew to delve deeper into what makes this country such a compelling phenomenon.

As Sanjeev travels from Delhi to Bombay, Jaipur to Calcutta, he meets ordinary and extraordinary Indian people from every background, and brings his natural warmth and sense of humour to these encounters. Although often baffled by the eccentricities of India, our endearingly good-natured guide never fails to find humour in these situations.

‘Sanjeev's India’ is also a personal journey as Sanjeev meets old relatives who reveal their moving and often traumatic stories of India's turbulent and bloody past, and comes to understand a little more about his own roots.

During his trip Sanjeev is invited to a middle-class wedding in Delhi as well as witnessing the poverty of the slums in the Calcutta backstreets. He wryly observes the polo-playing Maharajah jet-set in Jaipur as well as the kitsch of Bombay Bollywood, and experiences the Ganges lit up by a million floating candles for the ancient ritual of Diwali and the majestic colonial architecture of the British Raj.

With such an engaging and thoughtful travelling companion, we find ourselves going beyond the clichés to reveal a country steeped in history yet at the forefront of new technology, at once confusing, astonishing and jaw-droppingly beautiful.

©2007 Sanjeev Bhaskar; (P)2007 HarperCollins Publishers Ltd, London, UK
Sociology Travel Writing & Commentary Sports

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Sanjeev Bhaskar skillfully addresses India's complexities with humour and sensitivity - his rare gift. A great insight to one of the most complex countries.

Excellent

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Bhaskar takes us on a whirlwind trip across India, visiting poor and rich alike with equal attention and interest. India or rather Pakistan was the country of his forbears and clearly India is a place he has much love for. He has a great eye and ear for humour and gently lampoons some of the people he encounters in a very British but kindly way. Uppermost in his mind is the terrible violence that erupted between religious communities when the British withdrew. Its a subject he handles tactfully and compassionately, without shirking the terrible facts of the tragedy.

Sweet taste of India

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I loved this audiobook. I really wanted the book for the pictures but also wanted to listen when I am dog walking. I need not have worried, the scenes described by Sanjeev are just magical. I loved the juxtaposition of his familiarity with India on the one hand and being a fish out of water at other. He doesn’t shy away from the awful poverty and brings notes of optimism for the new India too. I learned a great deal and his obvious love and enthusiasm for India just shone through. The delivery is just perfect.

Painting pictures with words

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A lovely listen that uses a journey to the author's family roots in Pakistan via India (originally a BBC TV programme) as the framework upon which to hang his personal experiences and reflections in various states, cities and towns. On the way he tells stories from his suburban London childhood as the offspring of immigrants.



Sanjeev Bhaskar's tone is intimate and his approach is open-hearted. He tells his tale with humour and affection and one feels that he is capturing the true, ordinary person's experience of partition as well as that of modern India.

Gentle Introduction to the Subcontinent

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I was curious to listen to his personal views as he visited various places. It gave a good overview. I didn't get to watch the documentary.

Interesting

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