Djinn Patrol on the Purple Line by Deepa Anappara, 347 pages.
Jai dreams of being a detective, like the ones he sees on Police Patrol and the other crime shows he obsesses over. When a classmate goes missing it is of course very scary, but it's also an opportunity to convince his friends Pari and Faiz to be his assistants in solving the mystery. But as more children go missing from their basti (an Indian slum), Jai is forced to confront that things are not as simple as they are on tv. The police take bribes, but refuse to help, and nobody outside the basti seems to care about the children. Slowly, fear and suspicion begins to infest their basti as the stakes get ever more personal.Anappara is an Indian journalist, and this novel is inspired by events that she covered professionally. This expertise helps her to build an immersive community that makes the horrors of the book resonate harder. Jai is also a masterful perspective character. Jai is nine years old, and Anappara does a really great job capturing his voice in a way that felt very believable and enriched the book. This is not a happy novel, but it is deeply compelling, and I would recommend it.






