To: Mohan Marette who wrote (3362 ) 12/12/1998 1:46:00 PM From: Mohan Marette Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12475
The Gabriel Club by Joydeep Roy Battacharya.AUTHORSPEAK JOYDEEP ROY-BHATTACHARYA Writer's Bloc A Bengali whose literary territory is East Europe A decade and a half ago Joydeep Roy, then a young executive with Lipton, decided to switch from being a yuppie to being hippie. "I was tired of living out of a suitcase," he chuckles, as he speaks of life before his first novel, The Gabriel Club. Instead of frequent corporate tours Roy, who studied political science at Calcutta's Presidency College, decided to hitchhike across Europe and north Africa. The failure of his marriage only reinforced his inner crisis. Eventually arriving in America for a graduate programme, Roy continued fighting mental fatigue: "The American world view not only disturbed me but bored me like hell." After dabbling in a few courses in political economy at the University of Pennsylvania, Roy moved to philosophy. In 1997, he added Bhattacharya to his name as a tribute to his mother, Bharati, who raised him following his father's death when he was 11. The idea of writing a novel was hardly on his mind when he visited Romania: "I was still struggling to complete my PhD and fulfil my teaching load." But friends told him his East European travel journals contained a story or two. "When I sat down to write, I ejaculated 300 pages," he says. "Wasn't I surprised?" Distrustful of American editors, Roy-Bhattacharya sought English publishers. Most were intrigued by the book but were afraid it lacked popular appeal. At Granta though he found ready acceptance. The Gabriel Club (being published in India by Penguin) is an existential thriller about a group of young dissidents in Budapest who are forced to re-examine their lives, commitment and integrity five years after the fall of communism in 1989. Roy-Bhattacharya is often asked why he hasn't written an Indian novel or at least a book with one or two Indian characters and if he sees himself as an Indian writer at all: "Of course I do. But the idea that an Indian writing in English must perforce write about India or at most about the Indian diaspora has decidedly paternalistic, indeed disturbingly colonial, connotations." The bearded, cat-loving Bengali, now 35, is irritated by this identity-fixation: "Why should there be a need for reductive labels? If I do have a home, it's on the page." His next book, Through the Mirrors of Strangers, will have a "comparatively modest endeavour". It will chart the past 100 years of Russian history with St Petersburg serving as the backdrop: "Echoes of The Gabriel Club, but on a larger canvas." Talk of a globalised writer. india-today.com