In specific, yes. In general, I don't understand why, to pick an arbitrary example, O'Reilly gets a free pass as a go-to publisher on technical content, or why academic textbooks should be imported by default. Put another way: why isn't there yet an Indian publisher with the status of O'Reilly, whose books we're all desperate to get our hands on?
I think there are a variety of factors:
0) Many of the best computer engineers emigrate to US, where they do publish nice books.
1) US based developers often work with really good and experienced professionals (or at least learn from them).
2) US professionals are educated in a system that greatly encourages the "German Style" of textbook writing: clear, concise and to the point. This was started by the great mathematicians and physicists in Germany, who then came over to the US; the people who started writing computer books knew a great style and built upon it.
In contrast most Indian books are heavy on facts, low on insight, examples are crappy, typeset quality is terrible, many errors etc.
3) Most importantly, there just aren't that many excellent developers in India. A large chunk of the "computer engineers" are mostly doing grunt work that does not require much innovation. What will they write about?
4) Most Indian computer engineers work very long shifts; they don't get enough free time to try out and learn a new technology "in their free time" because there is no free time. Less people using a technology means that there is less expertise, less adoption. All of that adds up to a great inertia