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The Case of the Man Who Died Laughing

The Case of the Man Who Died Laughing
From the Files of Vish Puri, Most Private Investigator  
This edition: eBook, 320 pages
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Description


Murder is no laughing matter.

Yet a prominent Indian scientist dies in a fit of giggles when a Hindu goddess appears from a mist and plunges a sword into his chest.

The only one laughing now is the main suspect, a powerful guru named Maharaj Swami, who seems to have done away with his most vocal critic.

Vish Puri, India's Most Private Investigator, master of disguise and lover of all things fried and spicy, doesn't believe the murder is a supernatural occurrence, and proving who really killed Dr. Suresh Jha will require all the detective's earthly faculties. To get at the truth, he and his team of undercover operatives—Facecream, Tubelight, and Flush—travel from the slum where India's hereditary magicians must be persuaded to reveal their secrets to the holy city of Haridwar on the Ganges.

How did the murder weapon miraculously crumble into ash? Will Maharaj Swami have the last laugh? And perhaps more important, why is Puri's wife, Rumpi, chasing petty criminals with his Mummy-ji when she should be at home making his rotis?

Stopping only to indulge his ample Punjabi appetite, Puri uncovers a web of spirituality, science, and sin unique in the annals of crime.


"Delightful . . . Hall splendidly evokes the color and bustle of Delhi streets and the tang of contemporary India."
-- Seattle Times, "Best Crime Novels of 2010"
"Hall writes amusing mysteries…[his] affectionate humor is embedded with barbs."
-- Marilyn Stasio, The New York Times Book Review
"Modern India, in all its colorful squalor, provides a vivid backdrop for this well-crafted whodunit."
-- Jean Westmoore, Buffalo News
"Delightful . . . a terrific book with wonderful puzzle plot and a great setting."
-- The Globe and Mail
"Hall takes the reader into a very Indian, very Delhi web of spirituality, sin, slums, and power broking, but all treated with a veneer of wit and intelligent absurdity."
-- India Today
"Splendid . . . Entertaining . . . Vish Puri is large, constantly hungry, a perpetual victim of Delhi's traffic congestion, and a wonderfully engaging P.I. . . . A joy to read."
-- The Times (London)
"Hall has concocted a delicious book….Move over, Slumdog Millionaire!"
-- Anne Grant, Providence Journal-Bulletin (Rhode Island)
TheStar.com.my, June 11, 2011
...Youll have loads of fun with these novels. The Case of the Missing Servant Author: Tarquin Hall Publisher: Arrow Books, 312 pages The Case of the Man Who Died Laughing Author: Tarquin Hall Publisher: Hutchinson, 334 pages READING about the ...
Seattle Times, January 1, 2011
..."morality tales for the post-Soviet era." Padura is an investigative journalist, essayist, novelist and baseball nut. India Tarquin Hall: Hall, a British author, has created Vish Puri, a Punjabi "most private investigator" who lives and ...
Houston Chronicle, June 20, 2010
... • Tarquin Hall will sign and discuss The Case of the Man Who Died Laughing, 6:30 p.m. Monday (June 21) at Murder By The Book, 2342 Bissonnet. Information: 713-524-8597. • ...
Boston Globe, June 13, 2010
...As 101 Things I Learned in Film School suggests, After the climax, get out fast. Coming out  The Case of the Man Who Died Laughing by Tarquin Hall (Simon & Schuster)  Last Words of the Executed by Robert K. Elder (University of Chicago) ...
New York Times, June 5, 2010
...out without benefit of cloth in a public stairway. Lets just hope the job doesnt wear her out. Tarquin Hall writes amusing mysteries set in Delhi and featuring Vish Puri, the conscientious proprietor of Most Private Investigators Ltd., a ...
Examiner.com, May 31, 2010
...#8) June 29, 2010 Bone Appetit by Carolyn Haines (Sarah Booth Delaney series #100 June 22, 2010 The Case of the Man Who Died Laughing by Tarquin Hall (Vish Puri series #2) June 15, 2010 The Taking of Libbie, SD by David Housewright ...