Realism takes on a new meaning with Aman Sethi\'s recorded observances of Delhi\'s impoverished. As a journalist, Sethi\'s most renowned accomplishment in the field was the 2011 International Committee of the Red Cross award he collected for his coverage of police violence in Chhattisgarh villages. A Free Man, his first book, examines a life no less riveting, through the lens of the crude litanies spun by his subject. Which brings us to Mohammed Ashraf; a humble house painter by day, working hard to earn a living, only to fritter his money away as night falls and his addiction to drink calls. How exactly Sethi comes to earn Ashraf\'s trust is never fully explained, a technical flaw that can be overlooked for the lucid descriptions of lives that are tumbling to the gutter. As a writer, Sethi has a keen eye for detail and a sense of perception that succeeds in drawing the reader into the murky underbelly of Ashraf\'s world. Laced with black humour, A Free Man is a clever study of contrasting lives that amuse and perturb in equal measures.