The Sunday Guardian

Bollywood screams out from the pages of my book: Anmol Malik

- Latha srinivasan

Q: Now that your debut novel ‘Three Impossible Wishes’ is out, how do you feel?

A. I’m so grateful because it’s something I’ve been dedicatedl­y and diligently working towards all my life. To know that I can add the tag author to my name feels surreal. When I first wrote this book, I didn’t have a book deal in sight. I only wrote it to make myself smile. The book is hilarious and has layers and layers - like cake. It feels surreal that a publishing giant like Harper Collins picked up my debut novel. It’s blowing my mind right now!

Q: From writing music to writing a book is a natural extension in many ways, though the former is quite pithy.

A. I’ve always felt there’s a certain rhythm to writing and there’s a certain narrative to music. So in a lot of ways, they are similar, cut from the same cloth. It’s just how big the medium is - a song is three minutes and a book is 400 pages. I feel they go hand in hand.

Q: Your debut novel is a romcom about a desi girl studying abroad. Did you have a romcom in mind, or it just flowed as you wrote?

A. I think it just flowed and I’m also a huge rom-com fanatic. A lot of my writing is influenced by a screenwrit­er called Richard Curtis who wrote Notting Hill, Love Actually, etc. For me, rom-coms are less about the cheese and more about how charming and subtle they are. When it comes to a good rom-com, I feel it should be a like a reallife love story in that the two protagonis­ts end up changing each other for the better - they bring out the best versions of each other.

Q: Was anything in the book inspired from your own life? A.there was - the main the

Q. You have also been doing music for movies and commercial­s, and jingles. What is the importance of those thread of the book. I find that when you have to study or work in a city that’s not yours, it’s very difficult because you feel unsettled and disconnect­ed. I felt that that was one emotion that was overlooked. Being an internatio­nal student, I ex

I can’t wait for my third album to be out but every time I listen to it I feel that something needs to be changed. There will be a day when I feel happy about it and feel there is nothing more to do, I’ll finally release it. I have never given dates for the release of my albums. I never work like that unless there is a deadline. But it is interestin­g that the album came out during the darkest phase of my live, when I didn’t wanted to live anymore. Nothing at that time made sense, there was no purpose. I had lost everything and during that phase I locked myself with a friend and the goal for everyday was to make music. Ironically what came out was the happiest content and after that I pledged that I will never ever make songs that will make people unhappy or remind them of their sorrows. I will make songs that will remind people that there is always a way out of every problem and make them believe in life and love again. All songs are geared towards being positive. For instance, there is this song called “Shakkarpar­i” and that will be the first song to be released. It is about this girl who steals sugar from the market and distribute­s to people who have never tasted sweetness. All my songs are about joy

At 25, Anmol Malik has achieved more than what young women of her age typically would have. She is a successful singer-songwriter, has worked as an assistant director and now has published her debut novel too. Anmol, the daughter of renowned Bollywood music director Anu Malik, has forged her own career path and in her debut rom-com novel Three Impossible Wishes, published by Harpercoll­ins, takes us on a whirlwind journey of Arya Mahtani’s life. Excerpts:

perienced it first hand and I wanted to address it. There was a mean rumour on my campus that if you failed the exams, you just didn’t fail the year but you got deported! Nobody even questioned it but just believed it. Being an internatio­nal student, that’s the kind of alienation you feel no matter how friendly people are. There are a lot of serious issues the book touches upon but it’s masked under a lot of humour, feelgood, warm, fuzzy stuff. That’s the kind of person I am - I want to make these observatio­ns but through a light-hearted glance.

Q: Your book addresses a younger audience; do you think it’ll inspire more youngsters to read and write eventually?

A. That’s such a great question. I feel that the tone this book is written in is extremely accessible. It is 400 pages long but once you start reading it, you don’t realise it. I think what that does hopefully - for a reader is they feel if it’s that accessible, if it’s the way I talk, then it makes writing something even easier. They don’t have to pretentiou­s, they can just be themselves on paper. But I have noticed a shift recently. People love reading still and I don’t think books will ever go out of fashion. Books are like little portals to a different world. I don’t think they die out. As long as we’re human, we’ll find some form or the other to express ourselves.

Q: What are some of your favourite books and authors? Any genre in particular?

A. I read anything and everything - even the back of cereal boxes! I have grown up on Salman Rushdie, Neil Gaiman, Enid Blyton. I’m a big fan of Archies, Tin Tin and love the classics Jane Austen, Elizabeth Gaskell. I’ve read pretty much up everything. The genre I tend to lean towards - weirdly enough - is sci-fi. I love Douglas

Adams; I adore the whole Star Trek and Dr Who zone. Between sci-fi and romcoms, I’m caught in a very weird space but let’s see how that pans out in the future. Q: Speaking about romance, you’ve grown up in a Bollywood milieu and your dad has written so many romantic numbers. How much has Bollywood coloured your idea of romance? A. A fantastic question! Anyone who has read ‘Three Impossible Wishes’ will see Bollywood screaming out from the pages! The book is actually a movie in a book. Bollywood has been a great influence - the sense of romance being ultra-dramatic has definitely come from Bollywood. It’s been a big influence and I’m proud of being part of the Hindi film industry.

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