Indian Games
By Davis, Andrew McFarland

Price: $29.69
Rating:
 
(956 Ratings)
Categories: General Fiction
ISBN: 1-4219-3573-2, 9781595407047
Publisher: IndyPublish Co., 1st World Library - Literary Society
Language: English

Summary

"There are," says Father Brebeuf in his account of what was worthy of note among the Hurons in 1636, [Footnote: Relations des Jesuites, Quebec, 1858, p. 113.] "three kinds of games particularly in vogue with this people; cross, platter, and straw. The first two are, they say, supreme for the health. Does not that excite our pity? Lo, a poor sick person, whose body is hot with fever, whose soul foresees the end of his days, and a miserable sorcerer orders for him as the only cooling remedy, a game of cross. Sometimes it is the invalid himself who may perhaps have dreamed that he will die unless the country engages in a game of cross for his health. Then, if he has ever so little credit, you will see those who can best play at cross arrayed, village against village, in a beautiful field, and to increase the excitement, they will wager with each other their beaver skins and their necklaces of porcelain beads." "Sometimes also one of their medicine men will say that the whole country is ill and that a game of cross is needed for its cure. It is not necessary to say more. The news incontinently spreads everywhere. The chiefs in each village give orders that all the youths shall do their duty in this respect, otherwise some great calamity will overtake the country."

Bookmark and Share

Helpful Customer Reviews

Indian Games

Murray
Murray (Athens, 35, Greece) Sun Apr 26 2009 11:24
The best novel I had read set in contemporary India (until I discovered Shantaram which equals it). The daily Telegraph said it "Bursts at the seam with SEX, violence,corruption and death" and they are not far wrong. It also engages you in a mystery. Why would a local hoodlum build a shel...more...
Christopher
Christopher (Cherry Hill, NJ) Mon Jun 14 2010 17:51
While this book is not a translated book, it is exactly the sort of book I'm looking for in trying to read more translated works this year. The massive and sweeping book provides a colorful view of life in India, and the tendency towards meandering connections between the storylines and insets only...more...
Heather
Heather (Latham, NY) Sat Feb 23 2008 11:03
I've just started this, but I have to say...I love the glossary in the back of the book. I've been studying Hindi, but most courses don't teach you the types of words you'll learn here...
Johan
Johan (Brooklyn, NY) Thu Sep 18 2008 21:33
A magnificent spy-gangster-historical novel set in India.It's a bit like The Godfather, but with modern political thriller elements mixed in and almost without noticing it you learn how to swear like a Mumbai street thug.
Tracy
Tracy (Wallingford, VT) Fri Jan 23 2009 15:36
I read this a couple years ago to prep for an interview with Chandra, and now that I've seen Slumdog Millionaire I want to read it again. Sacred Games is a very detailed portrait of Mumbai's slums and high-flying mafia lords, with characters I couldn't help but care about (even, or especially, the c...more...
Neha
Neha (Bombay, India) Fri Dec 04 2009 07:54
Sacred Games.. the book should ideally be named as '6 Degrees of separation' or 'Chaos theory' or 'Butterfly effect' .. etc because everyone & every situation & every thing is related to each other.. starting a chain of events, growing bigger & bigger till the end.. when we realise that this ripple ...more...
Peter
Peter (Providence, RI) Sun Feb 14 2010 10:57
This was clogging my reading queue for a long time. I read it more or less as part of "an exchange of hostages" since I wanted a friend to discus MiƩville's Iron Council with me. In the end, my feeling are mixed -- it is clearly too long, but I am not sure what I would cut. I got to the l...more...
Miriam
Miriam (Seattle, WA) Mon Mar 02 2009 15:37
If you want a full pantheon of Hindi swearwords in your vocabulary, this is the book for you. It took a while to get into the story, and I found myself losing track of the various characters and plot twists at times, but couldn't stop repeating the words I had picked up from the glossary. About half...more...
Robyn
Robyn (Madison, IN) Sun Feb 14 2010 16:49
I was looking for an Indian detective novel, and I surely found it. You have to commit yourself to this book, because it's an Indian novel in the Mahabbarata style...900 pages long. But if you do commit, there are several rewards. One, you'll learn all the Hindi/Urdu curse words you'll ever need ...more...
Bookmarks Magazine
Bookmarks Magazine (The United States) Thu Feb 05 2009 11:41
To critics, Sacred Games seems nearly as bewilderingly complex as Mumbai itself. A Dickensesque thriller, the lengthy melodrama covers almost every imaginable topic__from religious nationalism to politics, castes, the seedy underworld, Bollywood, love, death, nuclear bombs, and the shimmering promis...more...