It was chance that offered me to live a dream when fellow blogger and ace photographer
Vikram Jeet Singh Parmar announced his intention to attend The '
Times of India Literary Carnival 2012.'
And so it began at the iconic
Mehboob Studios with the ever lively
Bachi Karkaria introducing the graceful Justice
Leila Seth, who spoke about bringing up
Vikram, her son who is today an internationally acclaimed author - most famously known for his creation -
A Suitable Boy.
The
Screensavers came alive next where
Anusha Rizvi,
Urmi Juvekar and
Rajeev Masand debated storytelling in bollywood movies. And then there was the vibrantly eloquent
Dr. Ramachandra Guha who spoke of his book,
The Passionate Liberal, in a manner that was the epitome of passion. And my joy was limitless when i got to meet him, to come face to face with the man who had created a definite masterpiece of literature -
India after Gandhi.
But delight knew no bounds when two critically acclaimed writers,
Katherine Boo and
Suketu Mehta, who work between India and the US compared notes about reporting across boundaries in an unequal, market-global age. It was a bigger sense of delight to have been able to meet
Suketu Mehta, in person, in flesh and blood. Coincidentally, i am presently reading
Suketu's classic,
Maximum City, which is truly one of the best works that lucidly describes the finer and not so fine aspects of this megapolis, this metropolis, this wonder.
Day 1, for me, concluded with the master historian
William Dalrymple launching his, yet another masterpiece -
Return of a King: The Battle for Afghanistan 1839 - 42. His ability to tell a story in its vivid, accurate and descriptive form is simply remarkable and unparalleled. It was rather unfortunate that i couldn't attend Day 0, which happened to be on a Friday, thus being taken up by work!
Day 2 began with a more closer-to-home point in case; the fine art of losing!
Sarnath Banerjee,
Shiv Vishwanathan,
Shaheen Mistri and author
Manu Joseph moderated that the winner doesn't take it all. A question that came up very pertinently - Why don't we teach our children how to deal with failure?
And then there was
The Eternal Manto - translated by
Aastish Taseer, read to us by the legendary
Javed Akhtar and the poet extraordinaire
Gulzaar, steered by the ad man
Prasoon Joshi.
A group of the finest story tellers from
South Asia then came together in the forms of
Daniyal Mueenuddin,
Rana Dasgupta,
Jeet Thayil,
Anjali Joseph and
Nilanjana Roy to discuss inspiration and the craft.
And finally, to talk of the challenges of adapting fiction to film, and about her latest film,
The Reluctant Fundamentalist, was the charming, confident and intelligent
Mira Nair with the celebrated director
Shyam Benegal.
But, it was not all of this alone that made it such a wonderful occasion. I ran into long time inspirations, free souls;
DK and
JJ - sailors, from another world, free and blissful, something that i can today only imagine.
Footnotes:
Image Courtesy -
Vikram Jeet Singh Parmar
Image Description - With
Suketu Mehta the author of
Maximum City: Bombay Lost and Found
More pictures from the Literary Carnival 2012 - On my
Flickr photostream