Indira : the life of Indira Nehru Gandhi / Katherine Frank.
Publication details: Boston ; New York : Houghton Mifflin Co. 2002.Description: xvii 567 p. : ill., maps ; 24 cmISBN:- 039573097X
- 954.04/5/092 B 21
- DS481.G23 F73 2002
Item type | Current library | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Book | NMC Library | Stacks | DS481 .G23 F73 2002 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 33039000686559 |
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DS480.84 .F75 2011 India : a portrait / | DS480.84 .G74 2007 India after Gandhi : the history of the world's largest democracy / | DS480.842 .V66 2007 Indian summer : the secret history of the end of an empire / | DS481 .G23 F73 2002 Indira : the life of Indira Nehru Gandhi / | DS481 .G3 A355 Autobiography; the story of my experiments with truth. | DS481 .G3 G2165 2008 Gandhi : the man, his people, and the empire / | DS481.G3 G823 2018 Gandhi : the years that changed the world, 1914-1948 / |
Includes bibliographical references (p. 537-544) and index.
On the morning of October 31, 1984, as she walked through her garden, smiling, with hands raised and palms pressed together in the traditional Indian namaste greeting, Indira Nehru Gandhi was assassinated by her own bodyguards. She died as she had lived, surrounded by men, yet isolated. It was a violent end to a life of epic drama. Here is the first popular biography of one of the world's most influential leaders, India's third prime minister. Brought up during an era that saw the rise of Indian nationalism, Indira was raised to be what her father, Jawaharlal Nehru, called "a child of revolution" - destined to play a political role in the creation and governing of an independent India. Despite her early reluctance to embrace this role, Indira eventually presided over a huge, complex, religiously riven, and male-dominated country. She was born to a wealthy, westernized family, but she had a gift for connecting with the poor of the countryside and the urban slums, the illiterate, the dispossessed - so much so that "Indira is India" became a familiar slogan. Throughout childhood, love, marriage, imprisonment, motherhood, and a sequence of personal and family tragedies, her personal hopes and desires were continually subsumed by the historical and political imperatives of her country. In this beautifully written book, the acclaimed biographer Katherine Frank draws on unpublished sources and more than a hundred interviews to create a rich, balanced portrait. "Indira" captures in full color the personal and political fate of the leader of the world's largest democracy - the woman who played a dominant role in the history of the twentieth century and who, when it ended, was voted Woman of the Millennium by the BBC.
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