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By Azera Rahman
New Delhi, Oct 23 (IANS): Their books reflect
a young and contemporary India's thoughts.
Debutant authors Shubham Basu's "Glian"
and Soma Das' "Sumthing Of A Mocktail"
are their own experiences woven around fiction.
Basu's "Glian" revolves around
the central character Dev and his love for
nature. In a bid to embrace nature and bond
with it, Dev sets off on a tour with three
of his friends to the fictitious Panida
National Park.
When asked why he chose nature as the subject
of his book, Basu said it was close to his
heart.
"Be it any subject, the narration
should make the mind think. The simplicity
of nature in pure and virgin form lets a
mind relate to it very easily; it's not
even an effort," Basu, 29, told IANS.
"I feel that when such a pure and
sublime identification is used as a medium,
the restrictions in language as medium of
communication reduce."
Having run away from home while in the
eighth grade for the lure of travelling
and later giving up his white-collar job
on Wall Street to come back to India to
open a travel company, it was only natural
that Basu's protagonist had the same blood
running in his veins as the author.
"Travelling is a humbling experience.
And in the lap of nature, travelling makes
you self-aware. This book is eventually
about self-awareness, the prowess to communicate
with one's self and understand that there
is a relationship bigger with the surroundings
than what is merely evident," the author
said.
The other book, "Sumthing Of A Mocktail"
by Das, is set in the sprawling campus of
Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) and has
a sub-title "At JNU where kurta fell
in love with jeans".
Das, 27, who has done her masters from
JNU and is teaching in Miranda House college
here, has taken a leaf out of her own life
to write about the lives of three girls
in the campus.
"The book is about the experiences
of three girls entering JNU which shape
their mental faculties and orient their
lifestyles to trigger a growth process in
them. These experiences transform them into
socially conscientious individuals,"
Das told IANS.
She said she always knew that the campus
was a fertile ground for ideas but was nevertheless
surprised when she couldn't find anything
worthwhile to read about JNU.
"Here existed such a rich institution
which remained grossly unexplored, so I
decided to venture into the unexplored area.
The decision that I had to make was the
choice of the form of expression - it could
be poetry, short story, novel or non-fiction,"
she said.
Talking about the 11-month effort to complete
the book, Das said she used to have reading
sessions with her circle of friends after
writing portions of the book.
"I was sceptical at the start since
it is my first book. I derived reassurance
from my friends with whom I used to have
reading sessions. I watched their expressions
closely, relieved when they laughed at intended
jokes even when sometimes they themselves
were the subject of a joke," she reminisced.
So do the authors have a target audience?
"My kind of audience can't be classified
by age or profession. He or she can be anybody,
anybody who likes getting tickled,"
Basu said.
Das similarly said her book has deliberately
assumed a simplified way of narrating so
as not to alienate anyone.
Although it's their first step into the
literary domain, both Basu and Das talk
nonchalantly about the Herculean task that
a new writer faces in getting his work read
and evaluated by a publisher.
"Selling glamour is easy all across
the world. Nevertheless, selling mind engagers
is slowly getting into the trend. If I talk
about blind Westernisation in India, I will
also like to see the generations in India
take up that part of creative admiration.
It will take time," Basu said.
He, in fact, has already started working
on his second novel.
Das said it is important for one to recognise
and differentiate between the writer and
the person within oneself clearly.
"The writer should not take criticism
or praise personally," she said, much
like a seasoned writer.
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