The Asian Age

TURNING ON THE RUSTIC CHARM

Manu Bhattathir­i’s new novel, The Town, just like his collection of short stories, will be set in Karuthupuz­ha

- VIDYA NAIR

It was not only the bouquets that Manu Bhattathir­i’s debut anthology Savithri’s Special Room and Other Stories

received that persuaded this advertisin­g profession­al to write a novel set in the same place. It was also his urge to tell a longer story, wherein the characters are explored more fully, that prompted him to write a novel. The author, who is a Malayalee settled in Bengaluru, started writing when he was on a hiatus from his hectic job at the advertisin­g company. Ask him if writing a novel was a tougher job and Manu says, “To me, short stories are nice, quick pieces of entertainm­ent. But novels offer a canvas for more elaborate studies of life and character.”

Those who have read his first book may have felt that the women were portrayed as easytohand­le characters. However, the writer has taken extreme care to make up for that in his novel. “The women in The Town are stronger, less typical and portrayed in more detail than in the short stories. Perhaps because

Savithri... was my first work, I have painted my women characters a little feebly and a trifle lazily. But I would certainly like to correct that as I go along,” observes Manu, who wants the characteri­sation to be perfect.

He adds, “I like this thing about life that it has no heroes, villains or protagonis­ts of any sort. Everybody you meet, down to the vendor selling

unbranded underwear by the roadside is a complete individual and a keeper of his own story. In my novel, I explore all kinds of people at different lengths.”

Manu’s books, be it Savithri’s… or The

Town… are set in Karuthupuz­ha. “In addition to being a quiet place to sit and write a story in, it has enough violently funny, emotionall­y intense and beautifull­y imperfect people to write many stories about. That’s the reason I created Karuthupuz­ha and also ` set my novel in it,” says Manu who stresses that he wishes to put the smells and sights of Kerala on paper as often as he can.

“The warm aroma of boiling tapioca in the kitchen of dirty toddy shops, the hiss of banana and jackfruit chips frying in pure coconut oil, the greenery that’s always fresh because of the abundant rains, the always bathed and proudly powdered men, women and children makes Kerala unique. The taste and smell of rustic Kerala will hardly leave my stories alone,” he adds.

He is also working on two books simultaneo­usly. One is another novel set in Karuthupuz­ha, which is about a girl who people say is possessed by an entity that is a god and a demon at the same time. The other book is a collection of short stories that belong to very different genres. In the future, he also wishes to write about city life. “I want to explore Bengaluru, the corporate world, the tiny jealousies and quirks of careerist men and women and the way they balance things out in pubs at nights,” he concludes.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? THE TOWN THAT... ALEPH Book Company Pages: 254 Price: 599
THE TOWN THAT... ALEPH Book Company Pages: 254 Price: 599

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India