Language | English |
---|---|
ISBN-10 | 0143425730 |
ISBN-13 | 978-0-143-42573-1 |
No of pages | 405 |
Font Size | Medium |
Book Publisher | Penguin Random House India |
Published Date | 26 Jun 2017 |
Ravi Subramanian is an Indian author. A banker by profession, Subramanian has written popular thrillers about banking and bankers, including award winning trilogy The Incredible Banker, The Bankster and Bankerupt. An alumnus of IIM Bangalore, batch of 1993, Subramanian spent close to two decades in the financial services industry. After having worked with companies such as Citibank, HSBC and ANZ Grindlays, Subramanian is now the CEO of a listed Non-banking financial company.
Subramanian writes popular columns for well-known magazines and has his own personal weekly column in the career and business life page of The Economic Times. Subramanian says "I will be satisfied if people remember me as the Grisham of banking," referring to the American author best known for his legal thrillers.
His daughter is Anusha Subramanian, she has been a published author
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The Ananthan Padmanabhan Swamy Temple in Thiruvananthapuram safeguards within its sacrosanct walls centuries of customs and rituals, unimaginable wealth and an unwavering calm. Until a dead body turns up in its holy pond . . . And then another. The murders threaten to shake the temple’s very foundation, and when fingers point to its sealed vaults and its custodian, Awasthi Thirumal Dharmaraja Varma, the titular king of Travancore, all hell breaks loose.
Meanwhile, a high-profile heist in a jeweler store at the Waif Mall in Dubai leads investigators to a massive smuggling racket and brings Kabir Khan, additional director of the CBI, into the heart of south India. In Mumbai, a series of high-intensity explosions kills many, threatening to dismantle the country’s most coveted diamond trade.
Could these incidents be related? Racing against time, Kabir tries to unravel the puzzle, separating fact from fiction, history from religion, and put a stop to the killing spree. Slick, riveting and fast-paced, In the Name of God is Ravi Subramanian’s most gripping novel yet.