Every time I have found myself at a historic monument in India, I&rsquove wished ASI would do better with the signage and storytelling, so that we could make meaningful sense of where we were instead of sauntering wide-eyed past wordless ruins. I am a huge fan of ASI&rsquos excellent World Heritage Se­ries but they are inevitably stocked helter-skelter (so you will find the book on Konark at their counter-desk in Humayun&rsquos Tomb, just like Sanchi is likely to be available at Mahabalipuram but not at Sanchi). So when I first encountered George Michell&rsquos immaculate paperback on Hampi in Hampi (co-authored with John M. Fritz), I purchased it with alacrity and I was not disappointed. By the time I reached Badami, I was asking for him by name and the hotel in which I was staying pulled out a copy and billed me matter-of-factly. My experience of Badami, Aihole and Pattada­kal&rsquos scattered sites was incredibly improved under Michell&rsquos guidance, even though that book was only a compact précis of his vast scholarship over the region&rsquos monu­mental history (and did not even touch upon enchanting Mahakuta), as I have just discovered. His latest is the first to do full justice to the extraordinary temples, art and architecture of the Early Chalukyas, without parallel in all of India for their unusually well-preserved condition despite dating back from the 6th to the 8th centuries.