The typo in the title made me wonder if there was some technical point I was missing, till I found it additionally featured a comma in the inside page. Podouké (in the text) appears as Podoké (in the chapter heading), and upper-lowers are curlicued to distraction. Never mind. Intach Pondi­cherry&rsquos logo was on the cover, so I was interested in anything the book had to say. Over nearly four decades, a dedicated band of conservation architects had monitored, restored and reused public and private properties (in that order of priority) to arrive at what&rsquos now called the &lsquoPondicherry style&rsquo, a slow but definitive process that has played a significant role in making tourism the mainstay of the local economy. However (and somewhat disappointingly), instead of documenting this process, Malangin treads the safe and already established ground of the colonisation of Pondicherry, beginning with a well-meant if inadequate introduction to Indes.