That&rsquos where the Magnum photographer Raghu Rai&rsquos new coffee table book Vijay­anagara Empire makes a tourist&rsquos life easier, as he has performed the feat of document­ing much of the Hampi area. Over photographic journeys made in the 1970s and 1980s shooting with black and white film, and in the early 2010s with digital equipment that captures the colours of the sacred and the profane, he has collected some stunning images, ranging from structural details and sculptural art (including a few items of erotica I must have missed when I went there) to the drama of the rocky milieu peo­pled by hardy villagers, otherworldly holy men and even the odd meditating tourist. It is all there in the pages of this book and while browsing through it, I was transported back to my latest visit to Hampi, almost as if I were walking through the ruins again. The mysterious Lakshminarasimha monolith, the grand elephant stables, the Lotus Mahal in its full glory, the famous stone chariot, the Hazararama temple wall carvings and many other temples, proud pavilions and majestic gateways &hellipthe photographs are so well reproduced that one can almost feel one is touching the sun-warmed stone surface, as one&rsquos fingers trace the contours of some carving or the other.