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This is an archive article published on November 30, 2013

Fighting the good fight

The Avengers by Juggi Bhasin characters are real and relatable.

Book: The Avenger: This Time Its War

Author: Juggi Bhasin

Publisher: Penguin

Pages: 495

Price: Rs 299

The Avenger by Juggi Bhasin takes up a year later after the events in The Terrorist,where Special Forces officer Suvir Suri faced his terrorist doppelganger,Murad,to a decidedly deadly climax. Now Suri has retreated to Himachal Pradesh to put a considerable distance between the world and his comatose lover and himself.

Meanwhile,in Delhi,a plane belonging to billionaire industrialist Suresh Jindal is hijacked while his daughter is on board and subsequently bombed,at the behest of the sociopathic Sikandar Khan,a Pakistani terrorist. Jindal prevails on Suri to avenge his daughters death as well as foil Khans machinations. The plot is a well-oiled,fast-paced machine,with Bhasin deftly providing backgrounds to his characters and situations without hindering the story arc.

The Avengers characters are real and relatable whether its a sarkari babus mistress,an inebriated pilot or a terrorist using homosexuality as a weapon without coming under any moralist fire. The portrayal of contemporary India as a country besieged by financial scams,separatist violence,TRP-hungry news channels and politicians with agendas,is fairly accurate,making the book an engaging read,despite some over-the-top accounts of global terrorism. Theres even an eerily au courant licentious episode between a senior and a cub reporter in an elevator.

 

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