Ask the Author: Susmita Bhattacharya
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Susmita Bhattacharya
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Susmita Bhattacharya
Dear Sucheta,
Thank you for your questions. Here goes:
The Normal State of Mind is a story of love and friendship. The story revolves around the friendship between Dipali, a widow and Moushumi, a lesbian, and the issues they face in their lives. It is set in 1990s India, the time around the Hindu-Muslim riots and the bomb blasts in Mumbai. As the blurb on the book says:
It’s the end of a millennium. India has made tremendous progress in science and technology, but in these times of economic boom can a friendship between two women give them the power to defy society, and law, to reach for their dreams?
Dipali, a young bride, is determined to make her marriage a success story. But her plans are cut short when her husband is killed by a bomb blast in Mumbai and she struggles to find her place in life. In Calcutta, as Moushumi’s parents discuss potential husbands, the school teacher prefers to escape to her high-flying lover. But how long can she keep her forbidden affair secret beyond the safe walls of glamorous art crowd parties? In the midst of communal riots, India too has to make her own decisions about which traditions she must keep, and which she ought to let go. At the end of it all, who can decide what is the normal state of mind?
I started the novel as a dissertation for my Masters in Creative Writing at Cardiff University. I knew that to be able to stick with the novel to completion, I’d have to write about a) something that I knew about and am familiar with, therefore it is set in Mumbai and Calcutta and explores friendship between women; b) look for answers to questions I had not asked earlier: homosexuality and its representation and acceptance in India and c) explore the concepts that are so important to me ie freedom of expression and freedom to live as individuals without having to conform to society (especially in the case of women).
I answered these questions in an interview here, http://theasianwriter.co.uk/2015/04/s... if you'd like to know more,
I hope you will read the book and find it interesting,
Best wishes
Susmita
Thank you for your questions. Here goes:
The Normal State of Mind is a story of love and friendship. The story revolves around the friendship between Dipali, a widow and Moushumi, a lesbian, and the issues they face in their lives. It is set in 1990s India, the time around the Hindu-Muslim riots and the bomb blasts in Mumbai. As the blurb on the book says:
It’s the end of a millennium. India has made tremendous progress in science and technology, but in these times of economic boom can a friendship between two women give them the power to defy society, and law, to reach for their dreams?
Dipali, a young bride, is determined to make her marriage a success story. But her plans are cut short when her husband is killed by a bomb blast in Mumbai and she struggles to find her place in life. In Calcutta, as Moushumi’s parents discuss potential husbands, the school teacher prefers to escape to her high-flying lover. But how long can she keep her forbidden affair secret beyond the safe walls of glamorous art crowd parties? In the midst of communal riots, India too has to make her own decisions about which traditions she must keep, and which she ought to let go. At the end of it all, who can decide what is the normal state of mind?
I started the novel as a dissertation for my Masters in Creative Writing at Cardiff University. I knew that to be able to stick with the novel to completion, I’d have to write about a) something that I knew about and am familiar with, therefore it is set in Mumbai and Calcutta and explores friendship between women; b) look for answers to questions I had not asked earlier: homosexuality and its representation and acceptance in India and c) explore the concepts that are so important to me ie freedom of expression and freedom to live as individuals without having to conform to society (especially in the case of women).
I answered these questions in an interview here, http://theasianwriter.co.uk/2015/04/s... if you'd like to know more,
I hope you will read the book and find it interesting,
Best wishes
Susmita
Susmita Bhattacharya
Difficult to limit it to just 5, but here goes:
1. A Fine Balance - Rohington Mistry - it's a saga, set in Mumbai and I love all of Mistry's works.
2. The Hungry Tide - Amitav Ghosh - the language, the concept, the story - amazingly good. But then it is Amitav Ghosh.
3. Too Much Happiness - Alice Munro - I love short stories, and admire Munro's writing
4. The World According to Garp - John Irving - because John Irving is a class apart
5. My father's Tears - John Updike - again, these short stories are gems
Hope you can read them and see if you agree! Best wishes,
Susmita
1. A Fine Balance - Rohington Mistry - it's a saga, set in Mumbai and I love all of Mistry's works.
2. The Hungry Tide - Amitav Ghosh - the language, the concept, the story - amazingly good. But then it is Amitav Ghosh.
3. Too Much Happiness - Alice Munro - I love short stories, and admire Munro's writing
4. The World According to Garp - John Irving - because John Irving is a class apart
5. My father's Tears - John Updike - again, these short stories are gems
Hope you can read them and see if you agree! Best wishes,
Susmita
Avishek Bhattacharjee
2,3 and 5 i have read and i will go with you on that.As far as Rohinton Mistry's novel is concerned..did you like that book since it is all about Mumb
2,3 and 5 i have read and i will go with you on that.As far as Rohinton Mistry's novel is concerned..did you like that book since it is all about Mumbai or it is mainly Mistry's work which allure u the most.
One more thing i want to know..as the surname suggets..U a bengali..Can we expect anything related to Kolkata or about a bengali family,traditions.myths and troubles in ur upcoming novels? ...more
Jun 01, 2015 10:12PM
One more thing i want to know..as the surname suggets..U a bengali..Can we expect anything related to Kolkata or about a bengali family,traditions.myths and troubles in ur upcoming novels? ...more
Jun 01, 2015 10:12PM
Susmita Bhattacharya
I love Mistry's writing, and of course, being set in Mumbai, my birthplace, I could relate to it. My novel is set in Kolkata and Mumbai, so I have wri
I love Mistry's writing, and of course, being set in Mumbai, my birthplace, I could relate to it. My novel is set in Kolkata and Mumbai, so I have written about a traditional Bengali family!
...more
Jun 02, 2015 01:40PM
Jun 02, 2015 01:40PM
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