Guest post by Piroj Wadia
Cities form an interesting backdrop for
books and films. Woody Allen has done a trilogy of three cities – Vicky Cristina Barcelona, Midnight in Paris
and  To Rome With Love. While two anthology
films - Paris , Je t'aime   (Paris , I love you) and  New York 
Literature too has exposed the city as a
backdrop. The city, notably the heart of the city with its cheek by jowl
buildings, lanes and bylanes intersecting found their references in the works
of Sadat Hasan Manto. Salman Rushdie,  Suketu Mehta, Rohinton Mistry, and others  have also set their stories in Bombay/Mumbai.
Two recent books join the list.   Yasmeen Premji’s Days of Gold & Sepia,
a  saga  
which spans Bombay 
 Though Lalljee Lakhia, is a fictional
character, there is a deja-vu about him,  the city of
Though Lalljee Lakhia, is a fictional
character, there is a deja-vu about him,  the city of 
Laljee’s life and times are skillfully intertwined
with events which occurred in that span of time.   As
Lalljee goes from a helper at a kirana shop to a textile mill owner, trader in opium, and landlord at large, the book
chronicles the history of a new India 
-- spanning Bal Gangadhar Tilak's call for swaraj to Muhammad Ali Jinnah's
fictional request to Lalljee to come to Pakistan Bombay Bombay 
A difficult  narrative  with its huge canvas enriched  with multiple characters,    Yasmeen Premji does that with élan, despite being
a debutante. The richness and lucidity of language is in sync  with the  vibrant characters,  which jump out of the pages of the book. All
through the read, one envisions Bombay 
- Continued in the post below




