@
Marshmallow
It summarises, more or less in good prose, the essence of the book under review, about Jinnah's and the Muslim League's intentions in seeking Pakistan, as seeking a new homeland for Muslim Indians. It details the fear that Muslim Indians had of being swamped by the Hindu majority in an undivided India, and their consequent effort to create pockets where they, Muslims, would be in a majority. It describes Jinnah's reconciliation of the Muslims living in Hindu majority being unable to enjoy these protections as a necessary sacrifice by a part of the community, for the good of the greater part of the community.
This is a point of view, and you may care to read it as a point of view. First, it was not at all clear or established that Jinnah intended a partition right from the first day he took charge of the Muslim political party, the AIML. The Ayesha Jalal thesis, although it is slightly threadbare now, postulates that he was bargaining with the British and with the Congress for maximal protection within one undivided India, and was within reach of his target, when he was let down at the last moment by Nehru's 10th July press conference. This author also assumes that the entire project of a Muslim homeland that would serve as a city shining on the hill, a beacon for all Muslims, was well worked out; all the evidence is to the contrary, that Pakistan moved from crisis to crisis, solving each in the light of common sense, and through individual Pakistanis inspired to work beyond their normal capacity by the intense patriotism that imbued them.
The book definitely seems worth reading; the original post, a review of the book in The Hindu, is certainly worth reading.