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Hat tip to the homegrown jasoos

Agatha Christie had an Indian challenger as early as 1930. We just didn’t know it. A new anthology presents the toast of detective fiction from the subcontinent, whose pioneers include women

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(Left) Kothanayaki Ammal and (Right) CS ‘Ambai’ Lakshmi. Illustration/Uday Mohite

(Left) Kothanayaki Ammal and (Right) CS ‘Ambai’ Lakshmi. Illustration/Uday Mohite

In the vast ocean of detective fiction and films, sleuths—whether amateur or trained—have often been accompanied by a literary foil, a side-kick who assisted them and brought forth the best of their investigative abilities. Consider Karamchand and Kitty, or Sherlock Holmes and Dr John Watson. In The Unexpected Inheritance of Inspector Chopra, British author Vaseem Khan pulls an unexpected trick: he fashions a young elephant as the side-kick, giving Chopra’s enterprise a fitting name—the Baby Ganesh Detective Agency.

Stories like these in the genre drew in scholar, writer and editor Tarun K Saint, who has long been fascinated by detective stories because of the intellectual challenge inherent in them. The intriguing clue-puzzle structure aside, he was also a fan of the ways in which they laid the groundwork for social critique.

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