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The Calcutta Chromosome

Front Cover
49 Reviews
HarperCollins, Jul 1, 1998 - Fiction - 306 pages
It begins in a near future New York City, when Antar, a low-level programmer and data analyst for a large bureaucratic concern, comes upon the lost and battered I.D. card of a man he once knew--a man who vanished without a trace some where in the teeming excess of Calcutta, India, several years before. Strangely compelled, Antar initiates a search into the facts behind the disappearance of the enigmatic L. Murugan, and is unwittingly drawn into a bizarre alternate history of medical science.

Leaping backward in time, we join Murugan in Calcutta in 1995, as he follows the twisted threads of science, counter-science and ritual back a hundred years further to the laboratory of Ronald Ross, the British scientist who discovered how malaria is transmitted to humans. Obsessed with the weird, fortuitous coincidences that led to Ross' groundbreaking discovery, Murugan has stumbled upon evidence of an impossible ongoing experiment in controlled destiny, protected by a powerful unseen society that moves the world in secret and in silence.

Suddenly, every fact hitherto known can no longer be trusted, for everything has been revealed to be other than it appears. In this steamy, overcrowded city of clashing cultures and hidden faces, L. Murugan has opened a Pandora's Box that carefully orchestrated death and misdirection have long kept shut. And the truth that is revealed will have momentous con sequences--for Murugan, for Antar, for a troubled female journalist and an exquisite Indian celebrity...for everyone and everything human.

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Amitav Ghosh is good with his story telling. - Goodreads
The ending was not convincing enough for me. - Goodreads
It was too cryptic an ending for me. - Goodreads
Plus, the ending just did not make any sense. - Goodreads

Review: The Calcutta Chromosome: A Novel of Fevers, Delirium & Discovery

User Review  - Riku Sayuj - Goodreads

What was that Mr. Ghosh? An attempt at a new genre? A bold stroke at creating a uniquely Indian view on science and how it would have been if science research was driven by mystics and cults? A spi ... Read full review

Review: The Calcutta Chromosome: A Novel Of Fevers, Delirium And Discovery

User Review  - Nethra Ram - Goodreads

The tagline for this book runs - A novel of fevers, delirium and discovery and I couldn't have put it better. There were fevers, there certainly was delirium and there were quite a few discoveries in ... Read full review

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About the author (1998)

Writer and anthropologist Amitav Ghosh was born in Calcutta in 1956 and spent his childhood in Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, and northern India. He studied in Delhi, Oxford and Egypt, and has taught in various Indian and American universities. He is the author of three books: The Circle of Reason, The Shadow Lines and In An Antique Land and has written for The New Yorker, Granta, The New Republic and The New York Times. Mr. Ghosh and his wife, Deborah Baker, live in New York with their two children.

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