February 18, 2016
by Neelima
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Historical fiction-an Exercise in Reality and the Consciousness @ Link Wanderlust

Historical fiction is an extremely difficult genre to write as on the one hand you need to do a lot of homework and on the other all the effort that you put in to understand a specific era can go to waste if you do not feel your characters and merely see them as representative of a specific time period. Alexander Chee writes about what he gleans from this genre and how he wrote his own historical fiction in the essay Children of the Century in The New Republic.

The historical fiction representative of all other historical fictions is War and Peace.Ivan Turgenev has been one of Tolstoy’s severest critics. He criticizes Tolstoy for depicting a Russia that did not exist and yet he was simultaneously Tolstoy’s greatest admirer. The question is what should be authentic about historical fiction? What can the writer get away with and how can he succeed?

“War and Peace holds a strange place in literary history, participating in the crowning of realism as a substantial and serious literary mode in America, even as the novel also contributed to the argument that historical fiction could be by nature dangerous, illegitimate, and inaccurate. This is the reason historical fiction is sometimes reviewed by historians, who may evaluate the novel for how much it has gotten right, instead of for its literary merit—as if the only thing for a historical novel to do is to authentically replicate the past.”

This genre has been selling on the higher side since the 1990s. Even writers like Hilary Mantel have initially faced rejections because of the literary taboo associated with novels steeped in history.

How does the writer of this essay write his historical novel-The Queen of the Night? He reads books around the period he wants to explore. That’s a good start. What he understood is just as author Henry James puts it:

You may multiply little facts that can be got from pictures and documents and prints, as much as you like—the real thing is almost impossible to do, and in its absence the whole effect is naught; I mean the invention, the representative old consciousness—the soul, the sense, the horizon, the vision of individuals in whose minds half the things that make ours, that make the modern world, were nonexistent.

Authenticity can only come from within the writer- facts apart, a historical novel like any other good novel is the story of the self being told. It starts within the writer, at the time of writing, no matter which time he or she is writing about.

writing the truth

Capturing Reality or Getting a sense of it?

February 17, 2016
by InstaScribe
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Quotes Wednesday

Power resides where men believe it resides.

By InstaScribe

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February 16, 2016
by punjacked
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Readers Can’t Digest – Week 75 (8-Feb to 14-Feb)

1. Audible releases ‘Romeo and Jude’

 

 

 

 

 

 

2.Survey finds 76% of children prefer print books

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

3.Ancient Greek manuscripts reveal life lessons from the Roman empire

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

4.OJ Simpson BBC drama tie-in to Arrow

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

5.Hoopla and Ingram sign a new e-book deal

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

February 15, 2016
by Neelima
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Dubai wives, Bureaucrat Lives and Strange Libraries @ Talking Terrace Book Club in January, 2016 (Part 3)

Have you checked out what the InstaScribe Team has been reading? You could read about the Talking Terrace Book Club in January, 2016 Part 1 and Part 2.

Jaya read a couple of books on a variety of themes.

the circle of reason

 

The Circle of Reason is prominent Indian writer Amitav Ghosh’s debut novel. The story has an element of magical realism and though Jaya hasn’t really made sense of this genre, she found the book quite an enjoyable read. The book reveals Ghosh’s interest in multiple histories. His character traverses through India and Africa.

 

Dubai wives

 

Dubai Wives by Zvezdana Raskovich is a book that seems to have a great deal of potential as it explores the lives of all kinds of women from bar dancers and house wives  in this colorful emirate.  However Jaya found the style a little too self-indulgent. “It would have been just as readable if it were two thirds the length as there seems to be a lot of repition that editing could have taken care of,” Jaya said.

 

english august

 

English August: An Indian Story by Upamanyu Chatterjee is a book that we talked about in one of our BYOB Parties. This satirical book is a delight to read and peppered with irreverant and crass observations.The story revolves around Agastya Sen, an elitist Indian who takes a government job in the Deccan region; the consequence can only be self-discovery. Incidentally it was the sequel of this book The Mammaries of a Welfare State that won Upamanyu Chatterjee the Sahitya Akademi award in 2000.

 

Shikhandi

Maybe it’s because Jaya is reading Radhakrishnan’s Indian Philosophy; she hasn’t quite taken to Devdutt Pattanaik’s mythological interpretations. She did enjoy the fluidity and ease with which he wrote Shikhandi and Other tales they don’t tell you. But she believes that too much simplification is hazardous to scholarship.

 

The Strange Library

An author that Jaya can’t make much sense of is Haruki Murakami. She enjoyed the visual appeal of The Strange Library, but she thinks this book is strictly for fans, and yes, it is best experienced as a print book.

 

And with that diverse reading list, we will be winding up this Talking Terrace Book Club account. What have you been reading this month?

February 12, 2016
by InstaScribe
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Visual Friday: The Hateful Four

Visual Friday: The Hateful Four

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February 11, 2016
by Neelima
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Patronage and the Lack of it @ Link Wanderlust

I found an interesting article in Dissent,  a quarterly magazine of politics and ideas and one of America’s leading intellectual journals.

Who pays Writers? asks Maggie Doherty, a lecturer at Harvard University, where she teaches American literary and cultural history. This is a question that keeps getting asked and of course not many writers are getting paid. Of course, the question is not remarkable, but Doherty surprises with her observations:

“Radical literary experimentation continues, but it has become the privilege of a few. In Barth’s day, a robust welfare state supported writers. Public patronage programs provided new classes of Americans with the resources needed to write and, through financial support, enabled them to take aesthetic risks.”

It’s hard to believe the kind of support writers used to get. Now, the story has changed though.

“No longer supported by the state, today’s writers must meet market demands. Those who succeed often do so by innovating no more than is necessary. Many of today’s most celebrated writers marry experimentalism with accessibility; they produce prize-winning fiction with just a dash of formal excitement, enough to catch the eye of cultural gatekeepers but not so much that it renders a work unmarketable. They forge aesthetic compromise and favor political consensus. Their work reassures readers more often than it unsettles them. This isn’t so much bad literature as boring literature.”

The author chronicles how projects like the Federal Writer’s Project(FWP) and the NEA Literature Program gave writers from all backgrounds a chance to express themselves in radical ways. Writers were paid to get their life out of the way so that they could experiment and create voices that were more critical and honest.

Today, Doherty thinks writers are forced to think more about money and so they don’t really want to talk about the most obvious things. They are forced to sell themselves out as they play to market trends and not to the need of better literature. A writer really can not be a diplomat.

“When writers are forced to conform to consensus positions, either political or aesthetic, the literary world starts to look depressingly monochrome. Literature that appeals to the mainstream isn’t just politically anodyne—it’s aesthetically predictable.”

We see this happening everywhere, regardless of the politic the country chooses. This brings us to the role of the writer. Is he or she a mouthpiece of those whose patronage they receive or do writers have a voice of their own?

If they do have a voice of their own, don’t they pay the price for it?

write.jpg

 

 

February 10, 2016
by InstaScribe
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Quotes Wednesday

What's the point of breeding children if each generation doesn't improve on what went before?

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February 9, 2016
by punjacked
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Readers Can’t Digest – Week 74 (1-Feb to 7-Feb)

1. McDonald’s to give away children’s books with Happy Meals

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2. Spelling uses multiple parts of the brain, research shows

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

3. Archie Comics Gives Away 100 Free Digital Editions

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

4.Amazon to launch a subscription music service

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

5. Speed-Reading May Not Be The Answer

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

February 8, 2016
by Neelima
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Ruskin Bond, Old Men and a Quiet American @ Talking Terrace Book Club in January 2016 (Part 2)

Did you visit our Talking Terrace Book Club post last week? You can read it here. Today we’ll look at the books my colleagues Srishti and Abhaya were reading.

Srishti took us through an old story that she had read by stalwart writer Ruskin Bond. The tiger’s name is Timothy and the lesson was part of one of her English lessons. The story is about the author’s grandfather who adopts a tiger cub and then must part with it as it becomes a menace. Many many years later, he sees a tiger in the zoo which he feels sympathetic toward and he believes it to be his own tiger. It’s a beautiful story. Bond writes with no airs and graces- he just shows the scenario and brings nature to life, which is probably why he is so much a part of the syllabus in textbooks in India.

Abhaya is discovering writers in Karnataka.

carvalho-menof mysteryK.P.Purna Chandra Tejaswi was a Sahitya Akademi Award winner. Besides being a writer, he was also an ornithologist, photographer, publisher, painter and environmentalist. Abhaya enjoyed his two novellas in a book called Carvalho/Men of mystery:Two Novellas. The first story is set in the Western Ghats in southern India and is an adventure story where a group of people from diverse professions come together. The second story is dark and brooding.

“Somehow I was reminded of Ruskin Bond while reading him, but given that I haven’t read much from Ruskin Bond anyway, I am skeptical of myself,” Abhaya said.

advaitathewriter

 

Advaita the Writer by Ken Spillman is a book about a child’s adulation for Ruskin Bond. Advaita is a lonely girl who studies in a  boarding school in Dehradun. When she learns that her favorite author lives nearby, she is inspired to write.  Incidentally Spillman wrote this book in dedication to Advaita Kala. Abhaya found this small wonder of a book at Lightroom Book store in Bangalore.

old man and the se.jpgAbout The Old Man and the Sea, Abhaya said,” My first book of Hemingway and I liked it from the first page. I usually find that it takes a few pages before I’m  really able to get into a book but this one reeled me  right in.”

He liked the way the book was as simple as a children’s book, as technical as a treatise on fishing, and as philosophical as the story of our relationship with food. “You just can’t go by the reviews,” Abhaya said. Apparently, a  reviewer has asked why the old man couldn’t have gone to McDonalds instead!
the quiet anerican

The Quiet American is a book on war. “War zones provide a fertile ground for etching rich characters with varied motives and ethical ambivalence. Graham Greene’s treatment of a love triangle in the Indo-China (Vietnam) war zone is controlled and nuanced. The story is set in the 1950s before the Americans got fully involved in the conflict.”

The edition that Abhaya had read also had a brilliant introduction by Zadie Smith.

 

topi shuklaTopi Shukla is a novel by a Hindi writer Rahi Masoom Raza. It’s a story set in the independence era in India. “ Having grown up in the UP of the 1990s, I identified with many parts of the story,” Abhaya said. It’s a book about the love –hate relationship between communities that is a given in many parts of India. So there is a bundle of contradictions- love for Ghazals, shayari and sufi music while rooting for Sanskritized Hindi.

Abhaya feels that this book is  especially relevant today , “ It is a book that shows us, paraphrasing Sheldon Pollock, a way of being that is increasingly alien to us. It offers us brief glimpses into the culture that produced people like Bismillah Khan.”

Another book Abhaya read was Mai by Geetanjali Shree. The story is about three generations of women (grandmother, mother and daughter) as narrated by the daughter. “Set in an old Zamindar family in small town Uttar Pradesh in north India, the book started pretty strong but lost its grip mid way. To some extent, the writing reminded me of That Long Silence by Shashi Deshpande in how the narrative weaves across time boundaries and goes back and forth.” Abhaya feels that this is a promising book, the sort that you could enjoy while reading a second time.

Next week we will look at what Jaya has been reading.

 

February 5, 2016
by InstaScribe
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Visual Friday: What Writers Do

What Writers Do

Re-posted from our archives.

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