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Crazy Rich Indians: Mahesh Rao’s Polite Society is a bitingly funny version of Jane Austen’s Emma

This amusing adaptation of Emma is set in the snobby area of Delhi known as Lutyens. It follows the lives of the super rich, who prove to be insecure, greedy and deeply lonely

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Polite Society is an adaptation of Jane Austen’s Emma, but it should be called Crazy Rich Indians. Photo: Shutterstock

Polite Society

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by Mahesh Rao

Penguin Books

3.5 stars

Early in Mahesh Rao’s Polite Society, a wealthy couple from New Delhi choose a venue for their wedding. Wanting a small affair without friends and relatives, they pick “that most unfashionable of foreign locations: London. Everyone knew that the Russians had ruined the place”. This sly dig sets the stage for the novel, a cattily amusing adaptation of Jane Austen’s Emma set in the snobby area of Delhi known as Lutyens.

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Much of Indian writing in English has focused on the country’s poor. Writers continually covering the tired clichés that tend to appeal to the West: arranged marriages, abused children, frying spices, squalor as far as the eye can see.

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