Delhi: Mostly Harmless

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About The Book

... nobody who lives there, nobody at all, has much good to say about Delhi.' Along with Milton Keynes, Detroit and Purgatory, Delhi is one of the world's great unloved destinations. So when Elizabeth Chatterjee makes her way from the cool hum of Oxford to the demented June heat of heat of Delhi to research her PhD, she find herself both baffled and curious about the je ne sais quoi of this city of 'graveyards and tombstones'.As flanêur and sagacious resident, Liz takes us through the serpentine power structures, the idyll, the bullshit-peeling layer after layer of the city's skin to reveal its aspirations, its insecurity, its charm and finally its urban dissonance. Uncannily perceptive, predictive and hysterical, Delhi Mostly Harmless puts a firm finger on the electric pulse of Delhi. Key Features:The book takes a timely and humorous look at Delhi's search for an identity, its elIt's and its future. Targeted at a general audience, it will include approximately fifteen concise thematic chapters. Based on months spent as a visitor, a resident and a young researcher into the country's corridors of power, it combines tragicomic personal anecdotes with broader social insights into this most up-and-coming but insecure of world cities. Unlike other books done about the city, Elizabeth's voice in unique, intelligent and rich with smacking observations. About the Author Born and raised in Yorkshire, Liz Chatterjee is a perpetual student. She graduated with a double first in History from Merton College, Oxford, before moving on to study contemporary Indian politics. Following brief stints working with Unicef and Oxfam, she is currently writing a doctorate on Indian energy policy. In 2008, she was elected a Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford, where she lives when not in Delhi.