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The Case of the Deadly Butter Chicken

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The Case of the Deadly Butter Chicken

By: Tarquin Hall
Narrated by: Sam Dastor
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Vish Puri is as fond of butter chicken as the next Punjabi. And when there's plenty on offer at the Delhi Durbar hotel where he's attending an India Premier League cricket match dinner, he's the first to tuck in. Irfan Khan, father of Pakistani star cricketer Kamran Khan, can't resist either. But the creamy dish proves his undoing. After a few mouthfuls, he collapses on the floor, dead. Clearly this isn't a case of Delhi Belly.

But who amongst the Bollywood stars, politicians, bureaucrats, and industrialists poisoned Khan is a mystery. And with the capitals police chief proving as incompetent as ever, it falls to Most Private Investigators to find out the truth.

Puri is soon able to link Khan to a bald bookie called Full Moon, and all the clues point to the involvement of a gambling syndicate that controls the illegal X billion dollars betting industry. The answers seem to lie in Surat, the diamond cutting and polishing capital of the world (where Puri's chief undercover operative Tube light meets his match), and across the border in Pakistan, Puri's nemesis, the one country where he has sworn never to set foot.

Or do they? A certain determined, grey-haired lady with a unique insight into the murder believes that the portly detective is barking up a wrong tree. Is Mummy-ji right? Is there more to the murder than meets the eye? And why, to make life even more complicated for Vish Puri, has someone tried to steal the longest moustache in the world from right under the nose of its owner - literally?

©2012 Tarquin Hall (P)2012 Random House AudioGo
Modern Detectives Mystery
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Critic reviews

"This lovely series is a great example of crime fiction functioning as a foreign holiday for the armchair traveller. Hall's readers become happily immersed in the glorious rhythms and neologisms of "Dilli" language, while the cuisine is so well described you can almost smell it. But in this instalment there's also a serious thread, detailing a horrific and heroic episode of Indian history, little known to British readers." ( Morning Star Crime Round-Up)
“I love Hall’s blend of inventive plot and Ealing-Comedy eccentricity.” ( Saga magazine)
“This lovely series is a great example of crime fiction functioning as a foreign holiday for the armchair traveler. Hall’s readers become happily immersed in the glorious rhythms and neologism of ‘Dilli’ language, while the cuisine is so well described you can almost smell it.” ( Morning Star)
“the Punjabi Poirot is dogged by calamities in this comic tale.” (Selected as one of summer’s best mystery and crime novels in Woman Summer Special)
All stars
Most relevant
My second Tarquin Hall/Inspector Vishpuri - and I can't wait to get on to the next. Hall has caught the flavour of India - the characters, the dialogue - with absolute precision. 'Don't do tension' Vishpuri exhorts at one moment. This portly private detective battles with murderers, moustache cutters, his weight, his 'mummy-ji', and all manner of life; and at the same time we learn of the terrible tie of Partition, and prejudices that still exist between India and Pakistan and, central to the plot, the corruption in gambling on cricket matches. Funny, informative, with a good story; and Sam Dastor juggles the voices with such familiarity that you really believe them. On to the next, and I can only hope Hall produces a fourth soon.

Entrancing from start to finish

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Once again, I entered into the delightfully nutty world of Puri and family. Utterly charmed by Mummy and her subversive tactics! This story starts off in comic vein, but evolves into a fascinating tale of present day India and Pakistan, and the deeply held prejudices resulting from partition. It's a richly-woven performance by Sam Dastor, who brings the entire story to life with his excellent characterisations. The somewhat pompous Chubby is made to rethink his ideas and misperceptions in a way that manages to convey the overwhelmingly disasterous effects of partition.

Not a turkey!

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Wow what an amazing book!
Don’t let the title fool you, this book covers so many important issues such as the partition and the trauma women endured during this time and intertwined in a murder mystery in an interesting way!!

Wow what an amazing book!

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Just Love these books on Detective Puri, this one is no exception. They are exciting, evocative of India bringing to life that interesting country and written with great humour. An excellent read - just waiting for more novels. The reader is also amazing! Should be 6*’s!

Fabulous!

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Would you consider the audio edition of The Case of the Deadly Butter Chicken to be better than the print version?

The audio version is perfect as Sam Dastor with his accents and characterizations makes the book "come alive". For me, reading it in printed form, would not have done it justice.

What was one of the most memorable moments of The Case of the Deadly Butter Chicken?

So many wonderful moments-I actually laughed out loud many times which is something a book rarely achieves, but the revelation of the atrocities to Hindu and Moslem women at partition in 1947 was a horrible eye-opener. I had never before heard of the tragedies that befell 1000's of women and families at that time. The description elevated this book from hugely entertaining and comedic to one of serious historical content. Very cleverly written by Tarquin Hall.

Which character – as performed by Sam Dastor – was your favourite?

All the characters are so well betrayed and although Mummy-ji is gorgeous my favourite has to be the hero Vish Puri.

Did you have an emotional reaction to this book? Did it make you laugh or cry?

Cry?-no. Laugh? A lot of the time. It was highly humorous.

Any additional comments?

I will hunt out anything else written by Tarquin Hall and hopefully narrated by Sam Dastor, who is already in my favourite narrators list. Excellent, so pleased I came across this gem.

A thoroughly enjoyable read.

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