| Call it Bombay or Mumbai, the city has
been attracting tourists for centuries. Back in the day,
the phoren people came by the boat load to buy spices, cotton
and an assortment of exotica to stock their houses. Today
desis come by the plane load to stock up on the latest Ritu
Kumar designs for their cousins’ or siblings’
marriage or to party all night in the city’s booming
nightlife. It’s bindaas Bombay yaar. Not dull Delhi.
Suketu Mehta had a totally different reason to go back.
(Although, I’m sure he also stocked up on the latest
designer duds and I know he knocked a few shots back with
Bombay’s glitterati.) A journalist and fiction writer,
Mehta wanted to answer the eternal immigrant question –
can I go back home?
A Bombay native until the age of 14, Mehta had been living
in New York and itching to go back and actually live in
the city rather than skedaddling in and out of Bombay for
journalistic explorations.
Naturally he jumped at the chance to write a book on his
beloved city. The chance came when his article, on the Bombay
riots that took place more than a decade ago, caught the
eye of Sonny Mehta, the head honcho of Alfred Knopf. Obviously
Sonny Mehta liked the sublime blend of the personal and
the political in the article published in Granta magazine.
Why else would Mehta (the writer) score a two-book contract
with Random House? (Mehta is currently working on the second
book, a novel.)
So, he packed his family’s effects and had his passport
stamped for a year’s sojourn. Seven years later, Maximum
City was published.
At 542 pages, the book is a bit of a tome. The first draft,
Mehta gleefully chuckles, was more than twice that length.
Sonny Mehta refused to speak to him for a short while. But
a lot of patient editing later, the compendium of the modern
day Mumbai resulted.
“I call the city Bombay,” said Mehta in a
recent interview at the downtown Random House office. A
black suit offset with an eye-catching mauve shirt hung
on Mehta’s tall and lanky frame. He had a slight stoop,
as if he’d just emerged from a long night in front
of computer, frozen in that posture. His phone rang with
various unfamiliar ring tones (I was expecting at least
one Bollywood one…) while he displayed polite phone
etiquette and asked if he could take some necessary calls.
The city has been christened different names by different
communities, Mehta elaborated snapping his cellphone shut.
And local Mumbaikars always called the city Mumbai. So the
business of re-naming it doesn’t make sense to him,
especially since the city was created by the British by
filling in the seven islands with sand. So, if anyone, the
British should get a chance to name the city. So, Bombay
it is.
Besides giving the reader neat little factoids about the
city, Mehta takes you on a journey that no travel book on
the city will ever give you. Then again, I’m not sure
the average travel book is concerned with meeting gangsters
or cops who have come up with their own macabre versions
of the third degree or dark alleyways where you could get
any kink satisfied provided you can pay for it.
The most fascinating characters in the book are undoubtedly
the gangsters. Mehta even manages to speak to the ‘don
in exile’ Chota Shakeel. (Anyone who’s been
keeping a track of fillum star Sanjay Dutt’s various
peccadilloes will recognize the name.) And the engrossing
explanations of gang histories are also your Coles notes
to movies such as Company and other upcoming Ram Gopal Verma
ventures. Mehta even initiates you into Bombay underworld
slang, which will definitely come in handy for wannabe Bombay
wallahs.
For Mehta, who painstakingly researched his subject by
networking with the black-collar workers and hanging out
at their places of business, chasing gangsters was exhilaration.
He had a sample of the sort of rush war correspondents feel,
when a joke eased the tension of facing a loaded gun.
Interviewing gangsters and the cop who led the arrest
of Sanjay Dutt (for his alleged links in the Bombay bomb
blasts) resulted in Mehta’s contribution to the film
Mission Kashmir. (His film scriptwriting career was thus
jumpstarted and now Mehta is working on the upcoming Merchant-Ivory
production Shakti, starring Tina Turner.) While co-writing
the movie, Mehta had a chance to speak to various Bollywood
types – actors, directors, etc. The most amusing part
of this Bollywood interlude has to be the section on Eisshan,
a struggling actor in Bombay. (Anyone who wants to make
it in Bollywood should definitely read this section, besides
watching Bollywood Bound. Not everyone will have the same
luck as Shah Rukh Khan.)
The book is a definite must read, especially if you’re
planning a Bombay trip. Interviews, mixed with personal
and honest observations, as well as well-crafted prose throw
the reader into the hurly-burly of Bombay. Telling the stories
of his characters, Mehta paints a picture of Bombay that
goes much deeper than shopping excursions, meeting family
and hobnobbing with celebrities.
|