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Hira Singh: When India Came to Fight in Flanders is Talbot Mundy's vigorous World War I adventure novel about Indian soldiers drawn into the European catastrophe. Centered on the Sikh trooper Hira Singh and his comrades, the narrative evokes the mud, confusion, and moral dislocation of Flanders while filtering battle through imperial, cross-cultural, and spiritual perspectives. Its style combines popular romance, martial realism, and oratorical storytelling, situating the book within early twentieth-century imperial adventure fiction yet giving unusual prominence to Indian courage, loyalty, and interior life. Talbot Mundy, born William Lancaster Gribbon, was a British-born writer who became associated with American adventure magazines and exotic imperial settings. His years in colonial worlds, his fascination with India, and his later interest in Eastern religions and mysticism shaped his fiction's distinctive mixture of action, philosophy, and critique. Mundy's knowledge was not free from the assumptions of empire, but he often complicated them by portraying Asian characters as intellectually and morally commanding. Readers interested in wartime fiction, colonial history, or the literary representation of Indian soldiers in Europe will find this a compelling and revealing work. It is both an adventure tale and a historically resonant document of empire under strain.