When I picked up Mumbai Mayhem I was drawn immediately by the premise: a dead body is left outside Kamala Mills with its face painted violet — a startling image that promises a mystery rooted in the city itself. That opening hook set my expectations for a fast, plot-driven thriller and, for the most part, the book delivers on that promise.
Plot & pacing (no spoilers)
The narrative moves as a procedural at its core: investigators untangle who the victim is, why the face was painted violet, and how that single crime threads into the lives of others across Mumbai. The pace is generally propulsive — tense where it needs to be and deliberate when the story needs time to breathe — so I rarely found myself checking my phone between chapters. My sense is the book keeps its focus on the mystery rather than drifting into unrelated tangents.
Characters — the detectives and the city people
What made the book work for me were the two investigators who anchor the story: Detective Billy Tavde, the more unconventional sleuth who leans on intuition, and ACP Raghav Gaitonde, the rule-abiding cop wrestling with the system and personal pressure. Their different approaches create friction and chemistry, and their scenes are the most engaging. Secondary characters — artists, victims, and people from Mumbai’s underbelly — are sketched with enough detail to feel lived-in without slowing the main investigation.
Setting & atmosphere
Mumbai itself is almost a character — the glamor of “City of Dreams” sits side-by-side with a darker underbelly, and the book uses locations (like Kamala Mills) to underline that contrast. The city’s noise, claustrophobia, and energy are threaded into scenes so that the investigation feels rooted in place rather than happening in a vacuum. I appreciated how setting informed motive and mood throughout the story.
Themes & motifs
Beyond the whodunit, the book touches on obsession, art, and mortality — one subplot centers on a tormented artist and how the pursuit of “truth” or “essence” can tip into madness. Those motifs give a slightly psychological edge to what might otherwise be a straightforward procedural, and they added an extra layer I found intriguing.
Writing style & voice
The prose is lean and readable; it favors scenes and dialogue over long interior monologues. That kept the momentum brisk and made the book hard to put down. At times the language leans into cinematic flourishes — which I liked — though readers expecting lyrical, literary prose may find it more utilitarian and plot-focused.
Strengths — what I liked most
I enjoyed the book’s strong opening image, the interplay between the two lead investigators, and the way the Mumbai setting was used to amplify tension. The plotting is clever enough to keep you guessing, and the motifs around art and obsession gave me something to think about after the final page.
Weaknesses — what could be improved
If I have to nitpick, there are stretches where the middle slows as subplots are introduced; a slightly tighter edit in places would have sustained edge-of-seat momentum throughout. A few predictable beats also appear in places — they don’t ruin the story, but they reduced surprise at moments.
Who should read this
If you like city-based crime thrillers with a mix of procedural work and psychological overtones, you’ll likely enjoy Mumbai Mayhem. Fans of gritty Mumbai-set fiction or readers who prefer plot-forward storytelling with strong atmosphere will find this a satisfying read.
Final verdict
Overall, I found Mumbai Mayhem to be an entertaining, well-paced thriller that uses Mumbai as more than just a backdrop. It’s the kind of book I’d recommend to someone who wants a tense mystery that also flirts with darker themes like obsession and the artist’s psyche. It’s not flawless, but it’s a compelling, enjoyable read that stays with you — especially because of that unforgettable opening image.

 
 
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