A promising visual and intellectual delight, When the Turquoise Waters Turned Dark provides a fresh perspective on the colonial history of one of India’s greatest historical and natural landscapes, the Andaman and Nicobar Islands. Crafted with? stunning photography and presented with a meticulously researched narrative, this book is an immersive exploration of the islands’ past. The images capture picturesque landscapes, architectural ruins and the diverse local population, giving a visual history and a narration on the present of the archipelago. Readers will journey through time, discovering the islands’ strategic importance during colonial times, the impact of various foreign powers that ruled the islands and the stories of the people who shaped the course of the islands’ history. The blend of visual splendour and historical insights makes this book an essential addition to the bookshelves collections of history enthusiasts, photographers and anyone interested in India’s colonial history.
Review
It is surprising to see a senior bureaucrat from the capital city of India capture the sprawling landscapes spilling into the sea, touching the changing colours and spirit of the skies of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, just eighteen months into his stint. Only a person of an artistic nature could have captured such magic every day. - From the foreword by Raghu Rai
Keshav Chandra has produced a deeply informative and richly illustrated tribute to the Andaman and Nicobar Islands. Their complex and disturbing history, as well as their ecological diversity, come alive through both text and photographs, celebrating the natural and cultural heritage of this beautiful archipelago. Deserves a place on every armchair traveller’s bookshelf!’ - Stephen Alter
Keshav Chandra’s survey of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands is a blend of visual delight and historical insight-everything that makes the place unique. [There is] never a dull moment in this chronicle of our most elusive twin islands. It testifies the author’s love for the place and the ocean. - Ganesh Saili
The title of this well-researched and exquisitely illustrated study of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands is a poetic reference to the conjunction of India’s peerlessly beautiful outlying isles and their unfortunate association with a notorious British penal settlement that confined but did not break the spirit of India’s freedom fighters. The Cellular Jail was opened in 1896 as a state-of-the-art penitentiary designed to demoralize the increasing number of Indian Home Rule activists such as the Maratha revolutionary Veer Savarkar who re-identified the sepoy mutiny as India’s “First War of Independence”. The book’s startling photographs reveal how Andaman and Nicobar’s natural beauty has overcome the dark colonial stain, and the sparkling turquoise has returned to host an abundance of brilliant marine life. ‘