Ghose's book, "The Gin Drinkers" first published in the year 2000, has been described as a tragicomedy of sorts, and acts as a mirror to the class and caste conflicts that describe modern India.
Her second book, "Blind Faith" published in 2006, also a work of fiction like the previous book, is a young woman's journey to the Maha Kumbh in order to discover the truth about mysteries shrouding her past. Both the books were relaunched by publisher Harper Collins here recently.
"Increasingly, the tenor of the times is that there is a gulf between traditions and the so called westernised elite who are detached from these traditions, who are called 'siculars' or the pseudo 'siculars' as opposed to the routed real Indians," says Ghose.
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The 'Macaulay Putras', a reflection of Babington's comment has a fundamental part in Ghose's books. She says she portrays then as "an urban, 'elite' class of people who are comfortable with English as primary medium of communication, representing an apparent social aristocracy."
V K Karthika, the editor at Harper Collins says, "These books talk about how a certain kind of social aristocracy has come to an end, how things are changing in this country, how things are giving way to this whole new social order.