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Posts tagged with: Bhattacharya Rahul

Pundit from Guyana

The Sly Company of People who Care by Rahul Bhattacharya is a novel detailing an Indian journalist’s travels through Guyana. Rahul Bhattacharya was recently awarded the Ondaatje Prize for this book. He has previously authored Pundits from Pakistan, a book on the Indian cricket team’s tour of Pakistan in 2004.

Congratulations on the Ondaatje Prize. Tell us a little bit about it.

Thank you. It is an award of the Royal Society of Literature in Britain, set up by Christopher Ondaatje, philanthropist and elder brother of Michael Ondaatje. It is awarded to a book that evokes the spirit of a place. Novels, travelogues, poems are all eligible for the Ondaatje Prize. 
What does it mean to evoke the spirit of a place?
First you have to understand the place. Once that is done, you have to find the technique to render it and commit yourself to the craftsmanship of conveying this understanding. There are no rules. Some people have a project in mind, in my case it was a book of discovery. 
Most people hear of Guyana only in the context of cricket. Is that what interested you in the place? Guyana?
Cricket was my gateway to Guyana. Like most other kids, I knew it as the place where Chanderpaul, Kanhai and Kallicharan come from. When I was a cricket reporter, the first country I landed in was Guyana. And a whole world opened up to me. And it was a part of the world that I knew so little of. And I was curious about its historical processes. That’s why I wanted to go back at some point. 
With respect to colonialism, how were the historical processes in Guyana different from those in India?
They’re completely different. India is an ancient society that has seen wave after wave of colonisation. The effects of British rule are felt most profoundly because it’s the most immediate. Guyana and the West Indies were very scantily populated areas. The indigenous tribes were not found in great numbers. So when the colonisers landed, it was a virgin territory to them. And they used it as an offshore factory. So people were enslaved from Africa, India and China to make sugar. And, eventually, it became a society almost created by colonialism. In Guyana, more than 90 per cent of the population was displaced as a result — Africans who had Africa beaten out of them, Indians who had no memory of India. India wasn’t a colonial creation, whereas the West Indies almost was. 
One of the chief delights of the book is its dialogue that almost wants to be read out aloud. Would you ever consider writing a play?
I don’t think so. I have had such a bad experience of watching drama in Bombay during my college days that I don’t have a feeling for drama anymore. But I do like dialogue. 
Which of your books are you closer to?
It takes a while to look at a book with detached affection. I feel more affectionate towards Pundits… right now because I don’t think about it much now. I can take it for granted. Sly Company… is slightly raw right now, but hopefully in a few years I’ll have the same detachment from it. 

[from The Hindu, 10th June 2012]

The Hindu Literary Prize goes to debut novel

Rahul Bhattacharya’s book wins the day for its consummate artistry

 

For the second successive year, a debut novel struck gold at The Hindu‘s “Lit for Life” literary festival. Rahul Bhattacharya bagged the ‘The Hindu Literary Prize for Best Fiction 2011’ for his The Sly Company of People Who Care.

The book, which narrates a young Indian’s Caribbean adventures in the company of a Guyanese diamond-hunter, was virtually deadlocked for the prize with the English translation of N.S. Madhavan’s Litanies of Dutch Battery, but eventually won the day for “its consummate artistry, its refusal to exoticise India — or Guyana … and its non-judgmental attitude to the characters.

The award carries a cash prize of Rs. 5 lakh and a plaque.

Presenting the prize to the Delhi-based author, writer and MP Shashi Tharoor said it was important to support the efforts of The Hindu to celebrate good writing in English in fiction, especially as the challenge of getting people to read in an increasingly television-dominated culture was a formidable one.

In his acceptance speech, Mr. Bhattacharya, who is also a cricket writer, joked that he was feeling a bit like (Mohinder) Amarnath running through the West Indies line-up in 1983 (when India won the World Cup).

[from The Hindu, October 30, 2011]

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