'Bollywood Deception' by Penguin Books begins with the murder of a starlet named Jeanie which is followed by a series of killings of young aspiring actresses - each more gory and perverse than the last - that has the police stumped.
Kas Batterywalah, a disgraced former policeman, and Kassatta, a suspended military doctor, work together, wading through the scandalous lives of the top stars, their perversions and sinister games, and racing against time to connect the dots.
"The idea then was to write a book on Bollywood and combine it into the narrative of fast, paced crime thriller. This idea had been brewing in my mind for the last eight years till I finally put pen to paper and came up with the book," he says.
According to Bhasin, who has earlier penned thrillers like 'The Terrorist', 'The Avenger' and 'Blood Song', deception and Bollywood are two different words but are in a sense indistinguishable in this industry as thread is to a needle.
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"The top stars, especially the scions of film families
operate with a feudal cocksureness and they walk away with all the film earnings and artists at the bottom of the food chain are paid a pittance or sometimes even denied that.
Bhasin says he has coloured true accounts with the colours of fiction and so the characters in his book are realistic rather than real or based on real life stars.
"Well I did see and observe the aberrant and exploitative behaviour of a lot of stars but the book is not based on the life and times of one big star or stars."
"I wanted to create an Indian version, especially a modern, contemporary version of the Sherlock- Watson duo. So you have a suicidal, brilliant Parsi detective Kas (Kas Batterywala) who teams up with a bisexual, disgraced military doctor Kassata (Dr Kasturi Pandey) and their chemistry is electric, always combustible as they crack the case."
Always big on research, Bhasin relied on what he had observed at the audition circuit, studio shoots and extensive conversations he had with struggling actors trying to gain a foothold in the industry.
"My book rips open the glitter and glamour cover of Bollywood and exposes the real underbelly, the scandalous lives of top stars and the almost primeval dog eats dog mentality that is the guiding spirit of the industry," he says.
"I do want to be approached by a producer who wants to make a film based on the novel and introduce the pair of Kas and Kassata to Indian audiences. If that happens I wouldn't mind seeing Anushka Sharma in the role of Kassata," he says.