From Bangkok to Bombay by Frank G. Carpenter is a travel and descriptive work documenting the author’s journey across Southeast Asia and the Indian subcontinent in the early twentieth century. The book presents detailed observations of cities, landscapes, trade routes, and colonial ports, including Thailand, Burma, Malaya, and western India. Carpenter focuses on everyday life, labor, commerce, and local industries, offering portraits of markets, plantations, railways, and urban centers. He also comments on social customs, religious practices, and ethnic diversity, interpreting them for a Western readership. Written in an accessible, journalistic style, the work blends travel narrative with economic and ethnographic description. Reflecting the perspectives and assumptions of its time, the book often frames Asian societies through comparative and colonial lenses. Overall, From Bangkok to Bombay provides a vivid snapshot of regional life and imperial connectivity in Asia, combining firsthand travel impressions with broader commentary on commerce, culture, and colonial administration.