Indira: The Life of Indira Nehru Gandhi
By (Author) Katherine Frank
HarperCollins Publishers
HarperCollins
29th May 2002
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Asian history
Political leaders and leadership
954.045092
Paperback
592
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 35mm
404g
A non-partisan biography of one of the most formidable political figures of the twentieth century. Indira Gandhi's life, from her birth in 1917, through partition and up to her assassination in 1984, was dominated by the politics of her country. Always directly involved in India's turbulent twentieth century history, once she accepted the mantle of power, she became one of the world's most powerful and significant women. Frank's biography deals with power and how this often isolated woman handled it, alongside her family and her emotional life.
'A stunning biography. Indira Gandhi was voted Woman of the Millennium, and yet her story is of a woman pushed into the public eye by men, corrupted by power and assassinated by those she should have trusted best - her own bodyguards' Jenni Murray, Sunday Times 'Well-researched, convincing and impressively fair to its subject' Philip Ziegler, Daily Telegraph 'A fascinating account of how an unpromising, if privileged, girl came to lead the world's largest democracy. Anyone who wants to get to the heart of this extraordinary woman (and the extraordinary country which she mothered, cajoled and eventually came to embody), could not do better than this accomplished book' Kathryn Hughes, Mail on Sunday 'Moving and revealing' Victoria Schofield, Financial Times 'An important study compelling and humanly sympathetic' Sunil Khilnani, Sunday Telegraph 'An excellent biography' Geoffrey Moorhouse, Guardian 'A fascinating, rigorous highly readable study' Caroline Macdonald, Scotsman
Katherine Frank, who was born and educated in the United States, is the author of three acclaimed biographies, of Lucie Duff-Gordon, Emily Bronte and Mary Kingsley. She has taught at universities in West Africa and the Middle East as well as Britain. During six years of researching and writing Indira she spent extended periods in India. She now lives in England.