'This is an absolute riot - part thriller, part satire of contemporary urban India' Mail on Sunday'If you're fat and Indian, you're rich; if you're fat and poor, you're lying. It's only the West where the rich are thin and vegan and moral...Ramesh Kumar grew up deprived and unloved, working on his father's tea stall in the Old City of Delhi. Now, brilliant but poor, he makes a lucrative living taking tests for the sons of India's elite. When one of his clients, the sweet but hapless eighteen-year-old Rudi Saxena, places first in the All Indias, the national university entrance exams, Ramesh sees an unmissable opportunity. Cashing in on Rudi's newfound celebrity, all goes well for both boys for a while. But Rudi's role on a game show leads to unexpected love, blackmail and, finally, a dangerous kidnapping. As Ramesh leads Rudi through a maze of crimes both large and small, their dizzying journey reveals an India in all its complexity, beauty, and squalor, moving from the bottom rungs to the circles inhabited by the ultra-rich and everywhere in between.Praise for How to Kidnap the Rich'A satire on modern India...this isn't a story about poverty, it's a story about wealth' Guardian'Conjures up a memorable world that is ghee-greased, polluted, mired in dust and corruption' Sunday Times'Like Mohsin Hamid's How to Get Filthy Rich in Rising Asia, How to Kidnap the Rich purports to be a how-to manual but is in fact a rollicking urban adventure and a biting satire of inequality' Economist
'This is an absolute riot - part thriller, part satire of contemporary urban India' Mail on Sunday'If you're fat and Indian, you're rich; if you're fat and poor, you're lying. It's only the West where the rich are thin and vegan and moral...Ramesh Kumar grew up deprived and unloved, working on his father's tea stall in the Old City of Delhi. Now, brilliant but poor, he makes a lucrative living taking tests for the sons of India's elite. When one of his clients, the sweet but hapless eighteen-year-old Rudi Saxena, places first in the All Indias, the national university entrance exams, Ramesh sees an unmissable opportunity. Cashing in on Rudi's newfound celebrity, all goes well for both boys for a while. But Rudi's role on a game show leads to unexpected love, blackmail and, finally, a dangerous kidnapping. As Ramesh leads Rudi through a maze of crimes both large and small, their dizzying journey reveals an India in all its complexity, beauty, and squalor, moving from the bottom rungs to the circles inhabited by the ultra-rich and everywhere in between.Praise for How to Kidnap the Rich'A satire on modern India...this isn't a story about poverty, it's a story about wealth' Guardian'Conjures up a memorable world that is ghee-greased, polluted, mired in dust and corruption' Sunday Times'Like Mohsin Hamid's How to Get Filthy Rich in Rising Asia, How to Kidnap the Rich purports to be a how-to manual but is in fact a rollicking urban adventure and a biting satire of inequality' Economist
Rahul Raina divides his time between Oxford and Delhi. He runs his own consultancy in England for part of the year, and works for charities for street children and teaches English in India in the down season.
A fun, fast-paced debut...HBO and the Oscar-nominated actor and
producer Riz Ahmed have wisely already bought the screen rights to
this Delhi-set, society-skewering debut caper...Raina, 28, was
inspired to write How to Kidnap the Rich by the US "Varsity Blues"
admissions scandal, but it is his depiction of bustling, hustling
Delhi and its grafting populace that makes this tightly written,
fast-paced, often sharply savage societal satire such a rollicking
read. He conjures up a memorable world that is ghee-greased,
polluted, mired in dust and corruption, but also thrusting...An
impressively entertaining but also insightful debut
*Sunday Times*
This is an absolute riot - part thriller, part satire of
contemporary urban India...Ramesh is a wonderfully vivid character
and this is an explosively funny, surprisingly moving debut
*Mail on Sunday*
A joyous love/hate letter to contemporary Delhi . . . Genuine
feeling flows beneath the potty-mouthed satire as it gradually
spirals into farce. Rahul Raina suggests life may be "a relentless
parade of fear", but it is far better to laugh than cry
*The Times (The month's best crime novels)*
India's politicians, endemic corruption, national obsession with
the West and above all its super-rich come in for a bashing in How
to Kidnap the Rich...what stands out in this book is its
unapologetic depiction of a Delhi that's frankly a bit
rubbish...But there's a fondness in this biting negativity, which
convinces more than the graceful descriptive passages of other
India-set novels. Chuck in twists and double-crossings, just the
right amount of violence and a denouement in a besieged TV studio
and you can't fail to be entertained
*Novel of the Week, Sunday Telegraph*
Like Mohsin Hamid's How to Get Filthy Rich in Rising Asia, How to
Kidnap the Rich purports to be a how-to manual but is in fact a
rollicking urban adventure and a biting satire of inequality. Mr
Raina adds a fast-paced crime caper and a stream of caustic
humour.... a highly entertaining first novel from a writer to
watch
*The Economist*
A satire, a love story and a thriller, How To Kidnap The Rich by
Rahul Raina has shades of The Talented Mr Ripley that also casts an
unerring eye over the huge disparity in Indian society. A
rollercoaster of a read, this is going to be big
*Stylist*
Energetic, vivid and funny, Ramesh's narrative voice is magnificent
and full of vigour
*Scottish Daily Mail*
[A] savage cinematic caper . . . In Rahul Raina's satirical
state-of-the-nation debut, which slices into the soul of
contemporary Indian society, things aren't always the way they
appear . . . Social commentary meets stand-up comedy, as with a
biting wit reminiscent of Binyavanga Wainaina's essay "How to Write
About Africa" or Paul Beatty's Booker-winner The Sellout, Raina
stretches stereotype and cliche into incisive satire
*Guardian*
Rahul Raina's How to Kidnap the Rich has already been optioned by
HBO: a Delhi-set, reality TV-based literary crime crossover, it
will appeal to fans of Parasite and Crazy Rich Asians
*Daily Mail*
Fans of My Sister the Serial Killer, Parasite and Crazy Rich Asians
will be enthralled by this riotous tale from the very first line .
. . A hugely entertaining and unique debut that satirically
dissects India's inequalities
*Cosmopolitan*
You can absolutely imagine How to Kidnap the Rich blazing across
the screen. It roars through New and Old Delhi , sending up new
money and old money, and taking an acerbic yet affectionately
head-tilted, eyebrow-raised look at the corruption, hypocrisy and
dynamism of modern India...Ramesh is a bracingly cynical and funny
narrator: endlessly snarking about insincerity and greed, with a
side helping of self-flagellation for being no better than he ought
to be - just a kid from a chai stall, plucked from poverty and
educated by a saintly white nun, who's somehow ended up a serial
kidnapper.
*Observer*
Intelligent, witty and sublime. I'm hooked. Remember the name.
You'll be hearing more of it in future
*Abir Mukherjee, author of A RISING MAN*
Funny and satirical, this is like nothing else I've read
*Clare Mackintosh*
Brutally funny and fast-paced, this debut from Rahul Raina proves
he is a star in the making
*Nikesh Shukla*
A satirical crime thriller-cum-profound social commentary, this is
an uproarious ride through the caste system of Delhi, new and old.
Energetic wit pours out of Raina's prose, while an acerbic bite
highlights inequalities in race, sex and social class . . . Veering
from ridiculous to heart-rending, Raina's exhilarating debut is
pure entertainment
*i Paper*
A wild and wildly funny ride through a modern day India that pits
the poor against the rich, high tech against ancient traditions and
one smart hustler against anyone who gets in his way
*Red magazine*
Eye-opening and huge fun . . . . A merciless attack on the
iniquities of new India in the guise of a comedy thriller
*Metro*
An exciting blend of crime caper, satire, love story and social
commentary . . . Raina, who was born in Delhi, neatly skewers the
inequalities of Indian society, racism (education is merely a tool
to a "whiter life"), sexism, and celebrity . . . Along with the
fast-paced twists, Raina also satirises the state of modern India:
the repercussions of the ongoing rivalry with Pakistan; the spectre
of China as the predominant world superpower; the shallowness of
modern culture; and the country's pervasive corruption.
*May's Best Reads, Independent*
Through a thrilling cross-sectional tale - that feels like a crime
caper-meets-reality TV show-meets-time-hopping love story - Raina
lets loose a real rollercoaster of a read, complete with a
delightful twist
*Apple Books Best of the Month*
Sparky satire on modern India . . . a lot of fun
*Sainsburys magazine*
Rahul Raina's voice crackles with wit and the affecting exuberance
of youth. His ripping good story grabs you on page one and doesn't
let go, taking you on a monstrously funny and unpredictable wild
ride through a thousand different Delhis at top speed. How To
Kidnap the Rich roars with brilliance, freshness and so much
heart
*Kevin Kwan, author of CRAZY RICH ASIANS*
White Tiger meets Caddyshack the movie in Raina's lively novel,
brimming with rat-a-tat-tat wit, breezy prose and a keen
observation of colorism, casteism and social inequity.
Unputdownable!
*Alka Joshi, NYT bestselling author of The Henna Artist*
Raina's debut novel lives up to its billing as a fun caper and
social satire thanks to strong characterisation, a fast-paced plot
and an eye for the ridiculous. His delicious skewering of the
social mores of Delhi's über-rich and clear-eyed rendering of
India's social hierarchy propel sheer entertainment into striking
elucidation in the mode of Aravind Adiga
*Booklist*
With its witty, ruthless skewering of the Indian middle classes,
Rahul Raina's roistering, whip-smart and deliciously fun Delhi-set
crime caper, How to Kidnap the Rich, is the first great
state-of-the-subcontinent novel of the 21st century
*The Bookseller*
Reading How to Kidnap the Rich by Rahul Raina was like being put in
a sports car with no seat belt. Rakesh Kumar, the protagonist, gets
your attention in minutes . . . How to Kidnap the Rich promises
wit, satire, strange twists and will leave you entertained,
frantically turning page after page . . . This one's a wild
ride
*The Book Satchel*
[A] funny and touching satirical action thriller, in a setting that
feels very fresh
*Morning Star*
A splendidly enjoyable farcical crime caper
*Daily Mirror*
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