This collection brings together seventeen of Kiplings early stories, written between 1885 and 1888, when he was working as a journalist in India. Wry comedies of British officialdom alternate with glimpses into the harsh lives of the common soldiers and the Indian poor, revealing Kiplings legendary powers of observation. The title story, The Man Who Would Be King, tells of two British vagabonds who set off to establish a small kingdom among primitive tribesmen in Afghanistan.
From Hauksbees Simla drawing room to Mulvaneys barracks cot and the wild hills of Kafiristan, Kipling re-creates the India he knew in stories by turns ironic and sentimental, compassionate and bitter, displaying the brilliance that has captivated readers for over a century.
Stories included here are The Strange Ride of Morrowbie Jukes, The Phantom Rickshaw, Gemini, A Wayside Comedy, At Twenty-Two, The Education of Otis Yeere, The Hill of Illusion, Dray Wara Yow Dee, The Judgment of Dungara, With the Main Guard, In Flood Time, Only a Subaltern, Baa, Baa, Black Sheep, At the Pits Mouth, Black Jack, On the City Wall, and The Man Who Would Be King.