Tuesday, February 10, 2015

Out of Print Author Series: Renu Balakrishnan

Our author, Renu Balakrishnan recently released Four Aleys. In this post, she chats with members of her book club, who followed the book through its evolution. It makes for a deep and affectionate conversation. Renu's Spider Man appeared in June 2013, and like the novel, is set in a Kerala seen through a sensitive lens.

Renu Kurien Balakrishnan in conversation with her book club members Anjala Singh, Manju Nanavathy, Shashi Merchant, Vatsala D’Souza, Liz Virkar.

Your debut novel book Four Aleys has been remarkably well received both by readers and critics alike. Can you tell us a little about its unusual title and touch on a few threads of the plot? 
I named the book Four Aleys because the novel is the story of four women in one family with the same name. Each has unique experiences and though they differ in character and temperament, a common thread binds them. They are strong but helpless. The youngest, aware of this even as a child is determined not to fall into a stultifying life such as theirs. The women belong to a patriarchal family set in a feudal society and in the course of the story cataclysmic events challenge this structure and destroy it. The youngest breaks away and sacrificing personal love and family ties forges ahead as a leader of the state of Devanidhi and achieves success in setting up a school for the victims of pesticides, to preventing the dynamiting of fish. The story is set in the 1950s and ‘60s when Kerala became the first example of a state ruled by an elected communist government.

The structure of the book – the circular narrative that loops back and forth – was that planned or did it evolve along with the story? Was it difficult to sustain?
It wasn’t planned. I wrote scenes and these not in any chronological order. The first scene at the cemetery was written much later than the scenes in the middle. Little Aley is recalling her past and the memories appear, as they will. Memory is never chronological. So writing in scenes worked perfectly. I strung them together with the expositions at a later stage. And much later I changed the narrative flow to enhance the connectivity of events. The loops appeared organically.

What were the personal and literary influences that helped shape your book?
My family is huge. Around 83 first cousins! I remember the fun and frolic of growing up in a family where seldom did less than 20 folk sit down to a meal. These experiences flashed into my mind when I wrote about Big House in Four Aleys.

I have always read a lot of fiction and so it’s difficult to isolate which particular authors and works inspired me. As an adult I loved the works of Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Haruki Murakami, Zadie Smith, E.M.Forster, and J.M. Coetze, to mention few splendid authors that come to mind right now.
I loved the idea of taking real characters from your family and giving them the life you felt they should have had - letting them live vicariously through your story! What was the reaction of your family to the book?
I haven’t based any of the characters on family members. I did use names and situations but I created all the characters in the book. My family doesn’t believe me and are reading and re reading the book and lively WhatsApp conversations are going on guessing who is who. But I had a favourite aunt called Kunjupenkochama and I made her into Little Aley’s lovable, loving, sensitive, capable, efficient, strong great aunt. She would have been all of these if she had been given a chance.


How has Little Aley developed such a strong sense of social justice at such an early age? Is that you - your sensitivity and awareness as a child? 
Most children do not discriminate and nor pay attention to social hierarchies. Their affection and respect is won independent of these. But a child does observe that some people are treated differently. Who can sit at the dining table for instance? Why are domestics made to sit on the floorboard of a car and not the seats? Why are some visitors made to use the rear entrance of the home? A child will accept these norms as the way the world works. Or, as in my case, as a child, question and then be disturbed by the answers. Little Aley is sensitive and ever curious about the two sides of the social divide. When she’s annoyed with Amini she calls her a servant and regrets it immediately. Somewhere inside her she knows she’s not being fair.

Could you explain the paradox of the strong women in your story who allow their lives to be determined by others?
Three of the four Aleys, though strong, intelligent, feisty women, let the men determine their lives. They know their strengths but fear to exercise their rights. Do they accept it as their fate? Do they allow themselves to be in the thrall of their menfolk because they see no other route as they wish to belong to the family, to society? They are aware of their dependence but afraid to explore outside the rigid rules, afraid they will flounder. So they chafe against the societal diktats, which even the church supports, but it takes three generations before the fourth breaks free. For the fourth Aley having seen the corrosive quality of obsessive love, wants no part of this legacy. Though she is eventually in a committed relationship it is one enjoyed out of the norms laid down by society.

There is a strong thread of magical realism in your book. Was that a conscious choice or did it flow naturally?
I attempted to use a kind of magic realism in Four Aleys. Death and loss are common occurrences in human lives. But how can one convey Elizabeth’s deep anguish on hearing of her mother’s death; Little Aley unable to bear the thought of the death of her beloved Raman; the deep desire to unearth the possibility of the existence of a little brother; Amini raped repeatedly by the scion of Big House. So talking boats, cries that hurtle through forests, baby in a jar of brine … ‘Magical elements blended into realistic situations to understand reality more deeply.’

Kerala, or Devanidhi as it is christened in your book, in the early part of the last century makes for a wonderful canvas. Do you believe that a writer must know his subject intimately?
I wanted to create a Macondo like town as Marquez did. And, yes, knowing and loving a place deeply helps you create a look alike and you can christen it with another name. The background provides the canvas on which the lives of four women are painted and so you need to understand its texture so that the painting is authentic.

While the Syrian Christian community will identify with the book how do you expect other communities around the world to do so?
The tiny Syrian Christian community will identify with it for sure. Other readers will be familiar with how small communities and religious groups all over the world hold their people in thrall, how they both bind and support their members. Readers may be compelled to read up on the Orthodox churches and their history.

How long did it take you to write Four Aleys?
I took over 8 years to complete the novel and send it to Vitasta Publications. I wrote sporadically over that time. I like to write in the morning and so for some months I would do so. Then would come periods of doubt and discontent and frustration and the story did not move forward. I had the idea of the four Aleys right at the start. I knew them intimately and their stories. This part evolved. The other characters and situations had to be developed gradually.

Finally, have you begun work on your next novel? Can you share with us a little about it?
I’ve an idea for a second novel: Pheely and the Puffer Fish. It’s about a truly ‘good man’ a dreamer who is absolutely dysfunctional. It’s about him his practical wife who has no patience with foolish dreams, his mother, a totally self-centered woman and his sister who is a nun. I don’t know where it’s going to go. The overarching theme is, who is a good person and that they don’t get recognised as such in our world. It’s set in a small modern town perhaps around the 1990’s.


Wednesday, January 21, 2015

Out of Print Author Series: R K Biswas

Congratulation to R K Biswas on her new collection, Breasts and Other Afflictions of Women. The collection includes the story, Word Among Poets that appears in Out of Print.

Asked about putting together the collection, she said:


I love short stories, as a reader and as a writer. I find them enjoyable and challenging. I seriously don't understand why people say short stories are hard to sell. I usually try out a new writer through his/her short fiction. Most of the stories in this book were written a few years earlier, and published in various journals and anthologies around the world. The oldest - Sunset in the Hills was published in 2001 in Gowanus. I keep writing stories and sending them out. Strangely, it had not occurred to me before to put them together as a collection. When I did get down to the task, I found (after sorting through them) that they needed to be collected into more volumes than one or two. One bunch of stories contain tales with men as the protagonists, and this bunch had women, so the first two collections (the second is on its way) was easier to put together. The subsequent ones will need more planning, I guess. In Breasts and Other Afflictions of Women I've tried to put in those stories that best represented the frailties of women, physical, social and psychological. I hope at least some of the stories resonate with readers.

We, at Out of Print, are quite sure that more than one story will resonate with our readers!

RK Biswas' short story collection Breasts and Other Afflications of Women is a garden of delights. Each story is a nugget of wit and wisdom plumbing the depths of what it means to be a woman at different stages of her life-- single, married, widowed. Biswas writes with an emotionally fluid pen, her descriptions crisp and precise whether we are following an aged maid who finds herself out of a much needed job, or a modern woman desperately seeking a job for self-fulfillment.  Biswas takes us to simmering kitchens in India and rainy streets in Singapore, to marital battlegrounds and playgrounds where teachers and students connect and, as her characters find meaning in their lives, so you too will see your hopes and dreams reflected in these heartfelt stories. 
Soniah Kamal author of the novel An Isolated Incident, and the satire Hairy Potter: Collected Columns. 

Friday, January 9, 2015

Sexual and Gender Violence Issue March 2015: Call for Submissions

So many of us have been victims of or witnessed sexual violence or are likely to know someone who has. But if we speak of it all, we do so in whispers.

Unspoken, unshared, these stories haunt us with fears we are too ashamed to name.

Yet every day we read about rape and other forms of sexual and gender violence in our newspapers. But sometimes violence is implicit, revealed in a glance, a stance, a touch. Sometimes it is far more explicit. It is almost always layered. Inequities -historic, gendered, socio-economic - participate in violence.

A newspaper article, rooted in fact and objectivity, does not always permit exploring multiple aspects and perspectives in the way that stories allow. Stories express ambiguity, confusion. Enable us to navigate a world that is not always black and white, to understand the complexity of choices and prompt introspection. The best literature changes us by helping us understand ourselves, others and the world around us better.

The act of telling stories, of articulation, can empower us. It can be a way of changing the narrative, exploring alternatives, achieving catharsis. We are no longer silent. We take control of the narrative. We take control of our fear.

The next issue of Out of Print is themed around sexual and gender violence.  For the first time, Out of Print, in addition to fiction, will also welcome creative non-fiction.

The last date for submissions is 20th February and the issue will come out in early March. This issue will be guest-edited by Meena Kandasamy and  Samhita Arni.

Submission guidelines here: http://www.outofprintmagazine.co.in/submission-guidelines.html