Apparently, Naipaul was a charming, warm friend, all too human after all, in the by and large flattering portrait that Theroux paints of him. But his narrative is also about his encountering Naipaul’s pungent, harsh political and cultural judgements that Theroux found mildly disturbing and that he never challenged. In fact, little in what Theroux reports about his friend’s opinions is radically new or shocking: these scabrous, imperious valuations and interpretations have long been available in his own books and essays. To Naipaul, the world is suffused with INFIES of all stripes: inferior, common, low class, vulgar, uncultivated, deluded and destructive folks. Dark people in dark, lush places appear to be the worst offenders, but whites in the third world and Britain are no less inferior and no less culpable in Naipaul’s eyes, though he has much less to say about their flaws.