Hari Kunzru achieved literary superstardom in 2001 with his giant advance (1.25 million pounds for US, UK and European rights) for his first novel, The Impressionist, a lavish, sprawling tale of identity crises, exotica and Empire set in the times of the Raj. With his second novel, Transmission, a tale of globalization, modernity, technology and Bollywood, he has silenced critics who'd predicted that writing a successful second novel would be difficult for him.
Born in 1969 in Essex to a Kashmiri father and a British mother, educated at Oxford and Warwick, Kunzru has worked as a TV host, a DJ, a travel writer, a magazine editor and a soft-drink salesman. Outlook caught the shapeshifter mid-transformation during a recent visit to India to promote Transmission
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