The Siege: Trapped Inside the Taj Hotel. Run or Hide
By (Author) Adrian Levy
By (author) Cathy Scott-Clark
Penguin Books Ltd
Penguin Books Ltd
8th August 2014
3rd July 2014
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
363.350954
Winner of CWA Non-Fiction Gold Dagger 2014
Paperback
368
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 35mm
500g
Trapped inside the Taj - with terrorists. A searing account of the 2008 horror siege at Mumbai's famous Taj Hotel. On 26th November 2008 the Taj Mahal Palace hotel in Mumbai is besieged by Pakistani Islamists, armed with explosives and machine guns. For three days, guests and staff of the hotel are trapped as the terrorists run amok. On 29th November commandos launch Operation Black Tornado. The world holds its breath. The Siege is a helter-skelter thriller, threaded with powerful human stories. By turns tragic and heroic, the events are told through a cast of real characters, who were thrown together in the luxurious, century-old Taj- waiters, chefs, captains of industry, hedge funders, celebrities, tourists, policemen, special forces and terrorists. For the first time, this astonishing book takes us through the news footage and into the heart of the hotel. Each hostage has a choice- hide, run or fight. What would you do
Compulsive and brilliantly researched. Reads like a fast-paced thriller -- William Dalrymple
Totally unputdownable, utterly absorbing - a minute-by-minute account of a hotel under onslaught. Here we have hostages, police and terrorists; their every fateful action and decision; the moments of sheer chaos and the crucial seconds of clarity
-- Paul French, author of the Dagger and Edgar Award-winning Midnight in PekingCathy Scott-Clark and Adrian Levy are the authors of four books, most recently the acclaimed The Meadow- Kashmir 1995 - Where the Terror Began. For 16 years they worked as foreign correspondents and investigative reporters for the Sunday Times and the Guardian. In 2009 the One World Trust named them British Journalists of the Year, having won Foreign Correspondents of the Year in 2004. They co-produce documentaries which have been nominated at the Amnesty International Media Awards and the Edinburgh International Television Festival, and longlisted at the BAFTAs. Currently they are filming several new projects in South Asia.