Available Formats
Great Eastern Hotel
By (Author) Ruchir Joshi
HarperCollins Publishers
Fourth Estate Ltd
28th October 2025
17th July 2025
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
823.92
Hardback
920
Width 159mm, Height 240mm, Spine 61mm
125g
'Riotously audacious and entertaining cinematic, jazzlike, a humdinger of a novel' KAMILA SHAMSIE
August 1941. The world is at war. At the Great Eastern, Calcuttas most luxurious hotel, amidst the feasting, dancing and laughter, we witness the metropolis in the last moments before disaster strikes.
On the day the revered poet Rabindranath Tagore dies, the city comes to a standstill. Thousands of people line the streets to pay their respects. Amongst them are: Nirupama, a history student and Communist Party volunteer; Imogen, the English daughter of a Raj official; Kedar, an aspiring painter; and Gopal, a young pickpocket who finds himself promoted into a dark, dangerous world.
The lives of these four people intertwine with those at the hotel: an American soldier who plays jazz at the nightclub; a genius French chef; an heiress fleeing from the nightmare in Europe; and a group of military officers running a secret intelligence operation.
Magisterial in scope, rich in detail and gloriously entertaining, Great Eastern Hotel brings to life India on the brink of independence. An epic tale of belonging, love, art and how individual lives can become swept up in the tides of history.
Sprawling exuberant compelling allow yourself to be immersed in this Great Calcutta Novel that captures both the sweep of history and the pulse of individual lives Scroll.in
Every phrase and image has been honed to perfection Read it for a masterclass in the joy of writing from the heart Deccan Herald
If, like me, you have been waiting for a quarter of a century for what Ruchir would write after his dazzling The Last Jet-Engine Laugh, I have some Persian for you: Der aayad, durast aayad. Finally, an Indian epic for our times' Mohammed Hanif, author of A Case of Exploding Mangoes
A film-makers novel, so vividly immersive at once human and epic, a Joycean polyphony of overlapping lives Jeet Thayil, author of Narcopolis
Sprawling exuberant compelling allow yourself to be immersed in this Great Calcutta Novel that captures both the sweep of history and the pulse of individual lives Scroll.in
Joshi scales down the event calendar and blows up the human drama so skillfully that his ordinary characters become magnificent creatures, anything but hapless victims of history The novel thrums with a visceral passion for its subject Frontline
Has there been a novel of such scale since A Suitable Boy Beneath its grand sweep, Great Eastern Hotel remains a novel about politics how the shifting tides of war and colonial uncertainty ripple through the lives of its characters this novel serves as a meditation on what was, what is and perhaps what will be Outlook India
Sprawling and ambitious There is a forceful and robust beauty to Joshis prose, an exuberance that makes dialogue come alive Joshis city teems with stories and he peoples it with a riotous assortment of personalities Open Magazine
Every phrase and image has been honed to perfection Read it for a masterclass in the joy of writing from the heart Deccan Herald
Joshi has managed the impossible with this book he has captured every nuance and quirk of Calcutta and its people, everything that makes the city both unique and ubiquitously Indian an extraordinary achievement I am so happy I read this book The Asian Age
A film-makers novel, so vividly immersive it makes mid-forties Calcutta a living being, at once human and epic, a Joycean polyphony of overlapping lives and a granular history of the nation during wartime Jeet Thayil, author of Narcopolis
'Glorious, brimming with life, Great Eastern Hotel contains multitudes. Ruchir Joshi captures crumbling empires and wayward human lives in this headlong, sensory dive into 1940s Calcutta. A towering novel one for our times, and for all time Nilanjana S. Roy, author of Our Freedoms
Ruchir Joshi is a trained and practising filmmaker in India. Born and raised in Calcutta, he now lives in Delhi.