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Spies, Lies and Allies : The Extraordinary Lives of Chatto and Roy / By Kavitha Rao

By: Publication details: Chennai Westland 2025Description: 256 pages 22 cmISBN:
  • 9789360452070 (Paperback)
DDC classification:
  • 954.0350922
Contents:
1. The Killing Fields; 2. The Magnificent Failure; 3. The Bomb Maker; 4. India House: Dying for Dharma; 5. In Search of the Golden Fleece; 6. Archaeology and Jihad in Berlin; 7. California Dreaming; 8. A Dagger, a Revolver and a Bottle of Chloroform; 9. Al Companero Indio: The Indian Comrade in Mexico; 10. Live the Life of a Cabbage I Would Not!; 11. Lenin's Young Man; 12. The Red Millionaire; 13. La Guillotine: The Downfall of M.N. Roy; 14. The End of Virendranat Agornatovitch Chatopadaya; 15. The Twice-Born Heretic; Epilogue: The Legacy of Chatto and Roy; Acknowledgements; Notes.
Summary: Spies, Lies and Allies is a thrilling tale about two forgotten revolutionaries who led lives that defy belief. It takes the reader on a wild ride through Kolkata, Hyderabad, London, Paris, Berlin, Stockholm, Mexico City and Moscow. One was Virendranath Chattopadhyaya, the brother of Sarojini Naidu. The other was M.N. Roy, the founder of Indian communism. Chatto and Roy met spies, dictators, femme fatales, assassins, revolutionaries and bomb-makers. They encountered Lala Lajpat Rai, Veer Savarkar, Vladimir Lenin, Sun Yat-Sen, Chiang Kai-shek, Joseph Stalin, Mohandas Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru. They travelled in disguise and survived assassination attempts by the British secret service. They had tumultuous love affairs with suspected Communist spies. They flirted with anarchism, then became communists, and Roy would eventually end up founding his own philosophy: humanism. Chatto’s sister Sarojini would distance herself from his journey, and his friend Nehru would eventually follow the Gandhian path. Roy would be ignored in newly independent India. But if Chatto and Roy were failures, they were magnificent ones. They battled for their ideas, and their ideas lived on, even if the pair died mostly forgotten. In this compelling dual biography, the bestselling author of Lady Doctors follows the threads of the converging and diverging lives of two extraordinary figures.
List(s) this item appears in: New Arrivals for 2024-25
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Holdings
Item type Current library Shelving location Call number Materials specified Status Notes Barcode
BOOKs National Law School General Stacks 954.0350922 RAO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) PB Available Recommended by Prof. Dr. Arun K Thiruvengadam 40090

1. The Killing Fields;
2. The Magnificent Failure;
3. The Bomb Maker;
4. India House: Dying for Dharma;
5. In Search of the Golden Fleece;
6. Archaeology and Jihad in Berlin;
7. California Dreaming;
8. A Dagger, a Revolver and a Bottle of Chloroform;
9. Al Companero Indio: The Indian Comrade in Mexico;
10. Live the Life of a Cabbage I Would Not!;
11. Lenin's Young Man;
12. The Red Millionaire;
13. La Guillotine: The Downfall of M.N. Roy;
14. The End of Virendranat Agornatovitch Chatopadaya;
15. The Twice-Born Heretic;
Epilogue: The Legacy of Chatto and Roy;
Acknowledgements;
Notes.


Spies, Lies and Allies is a thrilling tale about two forgotten revolutionaries who led lives that defy belief. It takes the reader on a wild ride through Kolkata, Hyderabad, London, Paris, Berlin, Stockholm, Mexico City and Moscow. One was Virendranath Chattopadhyaya, the brother of Sarojini Naidu. The other was M.N. Roy, the founder of Indian communism.
Chatto and Roy met spies, dictators, femme fatales, assassins, revolutionaries and bomb-makers. They encountered Lala Lajpat Rai, Veer Savarkar, Vladimir Lenin, Sun Yat-Sen, Chiang Kai-shek, Joseph Stalin, Mohandas Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru. They travelled in disguise and survived assassination attempts by the British secret service. They had tumultuous love affairs with suspected Communist spies. They flirted with anarchism, then became communists, and Roy would eventually end up founding his own philosophy: humanism.
Chatto’s sister Sarojini would distance herself from his journey, and his friend Nehru would eventually follow the Gandhian path. Roy would be ignored in newly independent India. But if Chatto and Roy were failures, they were magnificent ones. They battled for their ideas, and their ideas lived on, even if the pair died mostly forgotten. In this compelling dual biography, the bestselling author of Lady Doctors follows the threads of the converging and diverging lives of two extraordinary figures.

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