Coming of age, in Bombay
I started reading this book primarily from curiosity to learn what a 22-year-old who grew up in a home full of books, and with parents who are both writers, would produce. Not surprisingly, it turned out to be a mature, well-written, entertaining story with strong characters. The extras that I enjoyed were its solid moral base and quite a few giggles along the way.
The Sunlight Plane is a book about a
group of children and written in simple, engaging language. I emailed
Damini to ask if she’d had a reader in mind while writing it, and she replied,
“I imagined the reader to be anywhere above the age of 18.” Actually,
while reading it I’d felt I’d recommend it to ‘young adults’, expecting them to
enjoy and gain from it the way they would with books like Catcher
in the Rye or The God of Small Things
– or even Portnoy’s Complaint. This book does not have graphic and potentially controversial
scenes as the last named, it does have a central issue which is quite horrific
and it clearly outlines the trauma and the dilemmas of the children who
encounter it from different angles.
Damini told me that she started
writing this book when she
was 19, when she was in college. She started with a clear idea of who the characters
were, and how their interpersonal conflicts would further the plot. The first
draft took six months, and after that it was just rewrites and editing. While
this book will not have a sequel, Damini is working on monthly fantasy and
science fiction short stories, just for practice. These she uploads on her blog
www.everythingkane.wordpress.com.
In
answer to my question about her advise to aspiring young writers, she replied:
Practice and read, read and practice! There's no short-cut around this. It's especially important to practice the things you're not as good at. Personally, I'm doing these monthly short stories because I'm not half as confident at writing short fiction. Working on what you're weaker at will only make you better.
Good
advice for anyone doing anything, is what I thought, and it felt good to know that
young people today aren’t all low-attention-span, low-hanging-fruit gimme-gimme
type people as it quite often fearfully appears to be.
No comments:
Post a Comment