Prison  letters, despite being subjected to the scrutiny of government censors, often  supply some of the deepest insights into the mind of a revolutionary. Subhas  Chandra Bose’s letters from Mandalay certainly underscore the truth of the  poetic assertion: ‘Some walls do not a prison make, nor iron bars a cage’. They  make this volume one of the most moving in the 12-volume set of Netaji’s  Collected Works. Subhas Chandra Bose’s exile in Burmese prisons from 1924 to  1927 witnessed the transformation of a lieutenant into a leader. During the  non-cooperation movement and its aftermath he had wholeheartedly accepted  Deshbandhu Chitta Ranjan Das as his political mentor. The apprenticeship was  cut short by Deshbandhu’s death in June 1925. When Subhas received this  terrible news as a prisoner in Mandalay, he felt, ‘desolate with a sense of  bereavement’, as he wrote to his friend Dilip Kumar Roy.
  Netaji’s  letters cover a very wide array of topics—art, music, literature, nature,  education, folk culture, civic affairs, criminology, spirituality, and, of  course, politics. He bore the rigours of prison life with a combination of  stoicism and humour.
  This  volume is indispensable to an understanding of India’s greatest revolutionary  leader and will interest all historians of modern India.