Showing posts with label Jaipur Literary Festival. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jaipur Literary Festival. Show all posts

February 19, 2012

Salman Rushdie is over-rated


That Rushdie can rattle the festival still is a tragedy of colonial hangover to Indians. Guys like him and Naipaul are now fast becoming anathema and irrelevant in an India moving at multi-speeds. With the exception of folks like late RK Narayan , Ruskin Bond, and maybe late Nirad C Choudhary (just for the sheer knowledge he possessed), no living writer of Pre-Independent writerly era has kept up ...with what the New India has become or the aspirations of Indians post 1980s. They make provocative pronouncements which hurt Indians. Which is why, I agree with Chetan Bhagat's outburst against Salam Rushdie that a writer who offends the sensibilities of its people should be disowned, or something to that effect. Chetan may be cleverly talking his books up but more people have read him than the likes of all of Naipaul and Rushdie together in India. And what are we paying tribute to guys like Rushdie - so what if he and Naipaul have won Booker and Nobels. I have found more empathy to India from writers who are not PIOs than the so-called PIOs. E.g. Paul Brunton, Somerset Maugham, William Dalrympyle, Patrick French,Arthur Osborne even Mark Tully. We don't want wife-beaters, ill-gotten Elites and girlfriend-seekers to give their opinions on India. And no, their views are not relevant or needed here. Lets move on from the days of Raj.

January 19, 2012

Hyderabad Literary Festival ends, Literally!

Last week's Th Hindu carried a cover story on the Jaipur Literary Festival - making it out to be the biggest in Asia-Pacific of its kind. I was contented enough to just be at Hyderabad Literary Festival just for a day. The setting was impressive and Taramati Baradari was the perfect venue - quite and picturesque with vast spaces full of greenery and hillocks and tombs to comb. What was missing? Probably the buzz and the energy levels. JLF sees a galaxy of star writers and super-star agents but HLF is just beginning and you dont expect first year to be a tour de force. And in Hyderabad - you don't expect book-hungry loves to turn up like eager-beaver birds and hunt for autographs  or surround a much-published author giving tips on overcoming the writer's block. I was lucky to spend a few meaningful moments with long-time friends and better-published writers than me. We chatted up on books galore and publishing trends across the world in that brief session over a mild coffee. I figured out that most of those who turned out as audiences were retired teachers, literature students and academicians. Writers of reckoning were few to be spotted - the ones who came and went were Indraganti Mohana Krishna (director of "Ashta Chemma"- quite a reader and a sensible film-maker ), Saed Mirza, Vidya Rao, Gulzar Sahib and Pavan K Verma ("The Great Indian Middle Class"). I met an interesting lady who is a big gun at  one of the leading publishing houses of an MNC in India. We discussed the best books to read in 2011 and seemed to agree on the increasing trend of seeing Indians writing more about stuff that Indians love to read. We hit off a common note on quite a few trends shaping the Rs.10,000 crore big Indian Publishing Industry. My  acquaintance gave some dope on what are the new themes to work on in Indian Publishing. I mentioned that I anticipated this trend five years back - like in MTV, Indians want to see more of Indians. No wonder, you have more Indians writing on everything from business biographies, health mattes, spirituality, fiction and other matters of nonfiction that have a general appeal. Out of 80,000 titles published in India, the trend is still not reached a stage where Indian books outnumber foreign books - but it is desirably on the upswing. I was nevertheless happy to interact with some friends and new contacts to discuss bibliophilia - amongst other things why and where a mafia works in some capitals of the country, why Ayn Rand still sells more books than any living author today, how to write e-books that can be sold as downloads for the 50 million Amazon Kindle users worldwide. HLF, was not that bad and if only the venue was in the heart of the city, the turnout would have been impressive. I hope this is just the right beginning that will get Hyderabad literal, literally!

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