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At breakfast Michael told me the Elizabeth Frank biography of Indira Gandhi had created quite a stir. "Apparently, it’s got some things in it that are quite stupid. It’s just distracting from the merits of the book, some gossip stuff about whether she [Gandhi] was having an affair with somebody in the office there and things which ... It’s rather put me off the book, I must say." [CR] "The review I read was very good." [MF] "I read that first, too, and I thought 'that’s a good book.' The chap who did it in the Guardian was quite sensible. He’s a real expert on India and all that ... but what I read last night I’m afraid that, especially Sonia—"

What bothered me, after my own sessions with Michael, was his rather Puritanical response to Frank’s biography. He had not even read it, yet he was already condemning it. How could a journalist and a biographer base an opinion simply on soaking up some negative press comment and the word of friends? I asked a question that did not seem to have occurred to him: [CR] You don’t think Sonia might be overreacting to this biography? [MF] Well, she might be, I suppose. [CR] That’s my experience. Often families overreact. [MF] You bet. That might very well be. Much of the biography is pro-India. But I didn’t realise it’s got this stuff in it ... this lover in the office. Now it [Frank’s book] also says that at an early stage in her life Indira was not going to return to India. She was going to come here ... and that it almost happened. Now ... she’s [Frank] defending it, saying some people talked to her along those lines. I never heard it. But what did that prove? Surely Michael could see that his friendship with Indira could not, in itself, weigh against the researches of a serious biographer. I later read the book and saw no reason to dispute Frank’s account, which, after all, was a report, not a flat statement of fact. But to Michael and his ilk, any suggestion that Indira, who had spent the war years in London quite happily, would even have considered a life apart from India was anathema. Michael, by his own admission, was a hero-worshipper, and even when he admitted his hero’s faults, he could not seem to then re-factor his hero worship. Rajiv, for example, had accepted enormous bribes, Michael admitted. That was “very sad,” Michael added. “I couldn’t believe it at the beginning,” but Suraj Paul, one of Michael’s principal Indian backers, had disabused Michael of his illusions.

DMU Timestamp: January 22, 2016 23:23





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