The Star from Calcutta
Perveen Mistry, Book 5
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Buy Now for £15.63
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Narrated by:
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Sneha Mathan
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By:
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Sujata Massey
About this listen
A movie censor murdered, a leading lady vanished—the glamour, romance, and intrigue of the beginnings of Bollywood come to vivid life in the thrilling new installment of the Perveen Mistry historical mystery series.
India, 1922: Perveen Mistry, the only female lawyer in Bombay, is on the verge of securing her biggest client yet: Champa Films, a movie studio run by director Subhas Ghoshal and his wife, Rochana, the biggest name in Indian cinema. In the public eye, Rochana is notorious for her beauty and her daring stunts—behind the scenes, she has recently left the Calcutta studio that made her famous, and the studio owner is enraged by what he claims is a breach of contract. Rochana needs Perveen’s legal help to extricate Champa Films from the impending controversy.
To study Rochana’s glamorous world, Perveen attends a Champa Films screening and brings her film fanatic best friend, Alice Hobson-Jones. But in the aftermath of the event, one of the guests is found dead, and to make matters worse, Rochana has disappeared.
Now with a different legal obligation to her clients—to protect them in the face of a developing murder case—Perveen begins to investigate, peeling back the glitz to reveal a salacious web of blackmail, deceit, and romantic affairs. Perveen has her own secret: her relationship with a handsome former civil service officer, which is becoming harder to hide by the day. For the first time in their friendship, Alice seems to be keeping a secret from Perveen. Is she hiding key information about the night of the murder? Will Perveen be able to detangle the truth from lies while protecting herself—and her closest friend?
©2026 Sujata Massey (P)2026 Recorded BooksMy 5th in this series, and still loving all the characters. But my main issue is with the audio quality. The narration felt almost whispered or too low throughout. I'm accustomed to this narrator's accent and style, so I think it's more to sound controls in the studio. I have perfect hearing, but would get lost in many of the more quiet moments, where the ends of the words went too deep or low for me to hear.
Hopefully an easy fix in a sound studio, so by the time this review is ready, it might already be fixed, but for now, some parts require you to slow the speed down (which is already quire slow - the narration is also perhaps a little too slow for much of the book), turn the volume up too loud, and relisten to catch the ends of words so you don't get lost.
Vintage Bollywood glamour and intrigue
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