The Hindu - International

With his witty debut novel that mirrors the times, Tathagata Bhattachar­ya wants readers to learn from history and not repeat it

- Saurabh Sharma

Except for a handful of rich people, the residents of Tantilash are no longer excited about the Lynch Games. Madame President Nida Dodi cracks down on farmers and dissenters alike as she feels threatened by the increasing influence of the People’s Resistance Committee under the leadership of General Firebrand, who, despite meagre resources, is fighting her totalitari­an regime. A melange of such mesmerisin­g characters, along with figures from the past, populate the world of journalist and sustainabi­lity expert Tathagata Bhattachar­ya’s refreshing, witty debut novel General Firebrand and His Red Atlas. In a Zoom interview, he talks about the novel’s worldbuild­ing, our uncertain reality and the need to look into the past. Edited excerpts:

Question: What led to the genesis of this novel?

Answer: It’s difficult to answer. But let me tell you that I lost my parents and grandmothe­r in quick succession — in three years. Call it grief or whatever, I went through a period of insecurity. I felt that everyone I knew as a part of the family was leaving me. It was at that point that I started writing this book, and finished it in less than two months like a possessed being.

Also, as writers are a product of their time, I was wondering how the country I grew up in had so radically transforme­d in a matter of 10 or 12 years. There are many things which, as students then, we probably couldn’t have believed would be possible today, but those have become the norm. Such things have also played a role in shaping the novel.

Q:What books, music or other resources did you rely on to create the intricate world of the novel? Ever since a teenager, I’ve

A:been interested in the history of wars. In my Calcutta house, there are entire almirahs dedicated to warfare history, starting from

500 BCE to the modern era. Peaceniks and liberals don’t realise that today’s world is largely shaped by wars. The World Wide Web (WWW) is a product of military research. Penicillin, too.

The World War II generals mentioned in the book, I’ve read their memoirs — all of them. So, books helped, but I wasn’t listening to any music as I wasn’t in that frame of mind. In fact, the novel itself became a kind of redemption song. And as I felt everything was coming down crashing on me, it became a kind of an umbrella, a shelter.

Q:Your principal characters Nida Dodi and General Firebrand are quite eccentric. Also, in my view, there’s a homoerotic tension between El Comandante (aka Kapo) and Firebrand. Your thoughts?

I deliberate­ly chose the character of Madame President to break away from stereotype­s because whenever you think of an autocratic figure, you think of a man. But then, there’s this strange platonic affair she has

A:with a man, whom everyone would call a loser. She looks forward to their meeting — she dresses up and cooks — every 90 days. This wasn’t done to “humanise” her but to add a layer of complexity to her character. The same is the case with Firebrand. Though a very competent military commander, he’s a flawed person. Can’t keep his family in order; unsocial, especially with women; not good at listening; has temper issues; drinks too much. He knows he’s flawed, but he’s very comical, too. With Kapo and Firebrand, I didn’t want to convey any homoerotic­ism but friendship and camaraderi­e.

Why invoke figures from the past?

You study history to not repeat the mistakes you made in the past. Unfortunat­ely, such mistakes are being made. When the Roman Empire was disintegra­ting, it was trying to grasp it all; it was trying to project its strength at its zenith because it knew it was falling. That’s what’s happening today. A few people are convinced about the supremacy of their ethnic, racial, or religious identity. The irony is that no one is seeing that this is exactly what happened in the past. Which is why WW II was a watershed moment in history unlike WW I because it showed what the world hadn’t seen earlier — targeted ethnic cleansing.

I’ve visited concentrat­ion camps and war museums. There, I’ve seen what human beings are capable of. And remember, they were no barbarians. They were very sophistica­ted people, who read [Otto von] Bismarck’s works; listened to [George Frideric] Handel and [Franz] Schubert. And after doing that, they turned the gas valve in the concentrat­ion camp and killed children. They did it because they believed in what they were doing. A kind of rerun of the same is happening today. In our country, too, there’s a conscious attempt to brand a few people as secondclas­s citizens. So, I thought a reminder of things was very essential, especially in the times we live in.

A:Q:Peaceniks and liberals

don’t realise that today’s world is largely shaped by wars. The World Wide Web (WWW) is a product of military research. Penicillin, too

The interviewe­r is a Delhibased queer writer and freelance journalist. even as he realises that there is love in the relationsh­ip, he gets some bad news.

Sharma’s writing is simple but powerful and poignant. “Like two boxing champions, trapped in a ring...,” she writes of a conservati­ve motherinla­w and her foreign daughterin­law sizing each other up. Immediatel­y, you get the picture of wary advances and tactical retreats before punches are thrown. Another striking sentence comes from ‘In Possession’, a story of a young man building a relationsh­ip with the family he serves: “He looked after them as possessive­ly as a shewolf with cubs...” The only discordant note was the repetition of 10 pages in the middle of one story breaking the flow.

A great introducti­on to Sharma’s work, the book also offers a tantalisin­g glimpse into a forthcomin­g novel. Here’s looking forward to more from a master storytelle­r.

 ?? (SHASHI SHEKHAR KASHYAP) ?? X
Author Tathagata Bhattachar­ya is a journalist and sustainabi­lity expert.
(SHASHI SHEKHAR KASHYAP) X Author Tathagata Bhattachar­ya is a journalist and sustainabi­lity expert.

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