Wednesday, October 18, 2023

The Unexpected Inheritance of Inspector Chopra - Vaseem Khan

 


Although I'm reading more in the cozy mystery genre these days than ever before, I still do not consider myself to be much of a regular fan of the style. It's books like Vassem Khan's The Unexpected Inheritance of Inspector Chopra, however, that are steadily starting to change my mind about that.

The Unexpected Inheritance of Inspector Chopra, unbeknownst to me when I took it home from the library, is actually the first book in Khan's "Baby Ganesh Agency Investigations" series. And it is a fun introduction to Inspector Chopra, his wife Poppy, the inspector's pain of a mother-in-law, and perhaps best of all, to the baby elephant called Ganesh. It is not an exceptionally long series, but I do have four more novels and two novellas to look forward to reading, all written between 2015 and 2019. Khan began publishing his now four-book-long "Malabar House" series in 2020. 

"In a country where thieves and crooks were becoming ever more commonplace, particularly in the highest offices in the land, where people openly applauded those who managed to hoodwink millions and get away with it, Chopra was a man who stood for everything that was right and good about India."

As the novel opens, Chopra is enduring his final day as a Mumbai policeman. The inspector has recently recovered from a heart attack, but he's nonetheless being forced to retire some 10-15 years earlier than he had planned. But ever the vigilant cop, Chopra is going to work on the final case to hit his desk until the very last minute of his very last day on the job. And that's exactly what he does before returning home to Poppy and the baby elephant that had unexpectedly arrived on his doorstep that morning.  

No surprise to anyone who knows anything at all about Chopra's dedication to fighting crime in his city, it will not be easy for him to step away. Chopra realizes that the case of the young man whose drowning seems so suspicious to him will be quickly closed because the man had no clout in life - and he certainly will not be granted clout in death. After visiting the man's elderly father and promising to find out what really happened to him, Chopra goes rogue and begins his own private investigation.

The Unexpected Inheritance of Inspector Chopra, simply put, is fun. It's fun to watch Chopra try to figure out why his baby elephant is so depressed that he refuses to eat anything; it's fun to watch Chopra call for the help of the same cops who previously reported directly to him; and its fun to watch Chopra verbally spar with his wicked mother-in-law, among others. But most of all, it's both fun and rewarding, to watch the relationship between Chopra and Ganesh the elephant develop into what it turns out to be, a partnership of two equals in the fight against crime. 

If you have room in your reading world for another series, you could do a whole lot worse than the "Baby Ganesh Agency" series. Give it a look.

British Author Vaseem Khan


10 comments:

  1. Great review! Makes me want to read it again. The author has such a kind face.
    There's a series on Netflix called The Indian Detective that you might like. Not quite a cozy, but some really nice people, and Mumbai, which I just love seeing.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks, Nan. I've seen a couple of episodes of The Indian Detective and enjoyed them. For some reason, watching TV on demand has become very similar to reading books for me. I've got a TBW (to be watched) list almost as long as my TBR these days.

      Delete
  2. I was just thinking about this book earlier today and remembered that you were reading it. And now here is your review. I am glad you liked the book; I have a copy and I think I will too. And I am interested in the other series that the author wrote. I have also read more books lately that I would have rejected previously because they seemed too cozy. I am about to start one: Vera Wong's Unsolicited Advice for Murderers. So we will see how I do with that.

    I have always read both cozyish mysteries and darker or grittier mysteries, but I don't like the extremes of either. Cozy is harder to define, some reviewers only think of books set in book shops or bakeries or knitting mysteries (I really cannot think of any examples) as cozies, and others assume all Agatha Christie books (and such) are cozies. So it is hard to know what is referred to as cozy. (I thought it was basically an amateur sleuth, without much blood or gore on the page.) I avoided reading the Gregor Demarkian series by Jane Haddam for years because the first ten books had a holiday theme, and only tried reading them after 18 books were published, and then read all 18 in about three months. Not really very cozy at all.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. My quarrel with the cozy genre is that the novels seldom seem real to me. I find it difficult to take any danger seriously that the main character is in, always expecting some kind of a rescue to be right around the corner. There is violence in a cozy, I find, but it is almost cartoonish in nature to me no matter whether any dies or not. It's kind of hard to explain, really. When I enjoy them, it's because the characters are such a perfect fit for me or because the author keeps me amused by wit or style...oftentimes setting.

      I'm like you in another sense that I'm absolutely not going to read a series of books that use some cute way of linking all the book titles together. I stay away from food-linked titles using puns for sure.

      Delete
  3. You had me at baby elephant! ;-D I've read Khan's first book in his other series about Persis Wadia and really enjoyed it. I want to read more in that series, but also check out this one. now.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I think it's going to be a good fit for you, Lark. I'm really curious about his other series, but I'm going to have to wait a while before trying to work it in. Did you review that first book you read?

      Delete
    2. I did! You can find my review here: https://larkwrites.blogspot.com/2023/05/midnight-at-malabar-house-by-vaseem-khan.html

      Delete
    3. Thanks for the link. I see that you posted it back in May right before I got back on my feet healthwise and started posting and reading blogs regularly again. I'm definitely going to give the series a try because I've become, at least for now, a fan of Khan's style.

      Delete
  4. This series does sound fun! I need to read more mysteries set outside of the U.S. and the U.K. I hadn't heard of this series before, so thanks for the heads-up.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. This was a very pleasant surprise to me, Susan. Total chance brought me to this one...it just happened to be in a spot that caught my eye one day in the library.

      Delete

I always love hearing from you guys...that's what keeps me book-blogging. Thanks for stopping by.