1: Introduction: Killing the mother goddess
2: Mouth of the Cow: the Himalayan source
3: Holy waters
4: How to build a megacity - and save the Ganges
5: Varanasi: Hinduism's capital city
6: Varanasi revisited: Two days in the holy city
7: Toxic river
8: Superbug river: Not a magic cure - a deadly gene carrier
9: Of dolphins, crocodiles and tigers
10: Demography: not a dividend
11: Water and wells: why the taps run dry
12: Droughts and dams: engineering the Ganges
13: A Bollywood star: Ganga on film
14: Exotic river: the Ganges seen by foreigners
15: Storms and sandbanks: boat travel on the Ganges
16: Trade artery no more: Calcutta and Bengal
17: Mission impossible? How to clean the Ganges
18: Beautiful forest: Where Ganga meets the ocean
Bibliography
Notes
Index
Victor Mallet is a journalist and author who has reported for three
decades from Asia, Africa, the Middle East, and Europe, first for
Reuters and then for the Financial Times. From 2012 to 2016 he was
based in New Delhi as the FT South Asia Bureau Chief, and is
currently in Hong Kong as Asia News Editor. His highly praised book
on the south-east Asian industrial revolution and the 1997-98 Asian
financial crisis, The Trouble with
Tigers (HarperCollins), was first published in 1999. He twice won
the Society of Publishers in Asia award for opinion writing. In
India, he was twice awarded the Ramnath Goenka correspondent's
award for excellence in journalism in 2012
for a feature about the rise of Narendra Modi, and in 2015 for a
magazine cover story on the Ganges.
The book is well written and easy to read, even for a
non-specialist audience...there is much to learn from River of
Life, River of Death, and it is to be hoped that Mallet will repeat
his journey down the Ganges in a decade or two to update us on the
fate of this extraordinary river.
*Kenneth Bo Nielsen, University of Oslo, Pacific Affairs*
Fascinating.
*Barney Smith, Asian Affairs Journal*
Mallet's book is well-researched and richly anecdotal.
*Uddalak Mukherjee, Telegraph (Kolkata)*
The book is well rounded and comprehensive.
*Kaveesha Kohli, The Print*
The most impressive sections of the books (sic) are Mallet's sharp
accounts on the various players... a valuable reference point to
understanding one of the world's most intriguing rivers.
*Jacob Koshy, The Hindu*
Mallet's diagnoses of how the Ganges grew so diseased, and why
governments have been unalbe to revive it, are astute and
comprehensive.
*Samanth Subramanian, Literary Review*
Books of the year: "a wonderful achievement".
*William Dalrymple, New Statesman and Spectator*
Much to read and ponder.
*Greenbarrel.com*
In prose that is as sanguine and fluid as his subject, Victor
Mallet's River of Life, River of Death charts the course of the
Ganges, the spiritual and material lifeline of northern India,
through the vicissitudes of time, space, and the hubris of men.
Rich in detail and sparkling with the insight of a trained
observer, Mallet's chronicle is an engaging and enlightening
read.
*Shashi Tharoor, Indian MP and author of Inglorious Empire*
This book is an essential read for those who care about rivers and
environmental issues in India.
*Amit Ranjan, South Asia Research*
Masterfully combining fascinating history with acute observation of
India today, River of Life, River of Death is brilliantly effective
in its central argument - that the threats facing the Ganges - from
pollution, overpopulation, climate change, and often bad policies -
are also the severest problems threatening India's progress. Mallet
is at times brutally realistic about the prospects for rapid
improvement, but passionately concerned that success must
eventually be achieved. The result is a splendid and important
book.
*Adair Turner, Economist and Chair of the Energy Transitions
Commission*
Victor Mallet demonstrates vividly why India needs to get to grips
with the huge challenge of antibiotic resistance... I hope Mr
Modi's policy advisers read his powerful narrative.
*Jim O'Neill, economist, inventor of the BRICS acronym and chair of
the Review on Antimicrobial Resistance*
Victor is one of those rare foreign journalists who not only likes
and understands India but, in addition, has the capacity to see its
faults as well as impartially assess the efforts it's making to
correct them. This means his coverage of India is always informed
and thought-provoking. Even when sympathetic he's never biased. I,
therefore, implicitly trust his views and I have always learnt a
lot from his writing.
*Karan Thapar, Indian television anchor*
To try and fathom the wonders and follies of India through a river
is grand ambitionand Victor Mallet pulls it off!
*Gurcharan Das, author of India Unbound and The Difficulty of Being
Good.*
An extraordinary and fascinating combination of history, geography,
environment, politics, religion, and much more. Written with
affection for and understanding of a country of special importance.
This is a river of unsurpassed significance on the world stage,
whose flow and life is traced from the Himalayas to the Sunderbans
and the Bay of Bengal. Not just the story of an often difficult
past but also of hope for a possible healthy and attractive
future.
*Nicholas Stern, IG Patel Professor of Economics and Government at
LSE*
The book, like the Ganges, is stately, somewhat meandering, but
fascinating and nourishing, and well worth a visit.
*Peter Admirand, newbooks.asia*
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