The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Persistenc­e pays off in dual literary debut

Georgia author’s two titles will be released in spring of upcoming year.

- Suzanne Van Atten

After living through 2020, this Thanksgivi­ng gives us a special reason to think about why we should be grateful — even for little things. Yes, it’s been a tough year. Yet, author and activist Anjali Enjeti of Johns Creek is among those who are filled with gratitude this holiday.

For more than a decade, Enjeti submitted countless queries to agents and copies of manuscript­s to presses in hopes of publishing a book. She had two in the works, a completed novel and a proposal of essays. Meanwhile, she continued to write and publish essays and reviews in myriad publicatio­ns, including The Atlantic, The Washington Post, The Paris Review and The Atlanta Journal- Constituti­on.

After her 10th year of trying and failing to publish a book, Enjeti kind of gave up.

“I was happy with what I was doing,” she said. “I love writing book reviews. I love interviewi­ng people. I love writing about politics. I had a very fulfilling writing life without the book.”

Then, out of the blue, she received a response to a proposal that had been lingering in the slush pile at the University of Georgia Press for ages. They wanted to publish “Southbound,” her collection of essays about identity and activism. Soon after, she heard from Hub City Press, a nonprofit publisher in Spartanbur­g, South Carolina, that specialize­s in literary fiction rooted in the South. Enjeti’s novel “The Parted Earth” was selected as the next book in the Charles Frazier Cold Mountain Fund series. Both books come out in spring 2021.

“It’s been incredible. I truly never thought I’d get a book published,” said Enjeti. “I had pretty much closed the door to that

chapter.”

“The Parted Earth,” which comes out May 4, is an elegantly crafted story about families and loved ones devastated by separation during the 1947 Partition of India and how that trauma reverberat­es across generation­s.

Born in Michigan, Enjeti grew up in Chattanoog­a, Tennessee, and has lived in metro Atlanta since 2006. But she often visited her father’s family in India during the summers of her youth. Once she became an adult, though, time sprouted wings and major life events like marriage, motherhood and a law career consumed her. When she finally returned in 2011, 19 years had passed. By then, both her grandparen­ts had died.

“We were there for a wedding, and we took a side trip to go to the Taj Mahal,” Enjeti said. “It was the first time my husband, Brian, went to India; the first time my girls went to India. They were ages 10, 6 and 3. I was with my parents, and I’m standing on the terrace of the Taj Mahal, and I’m looking northwest as the sun was setting. And I was filled with immense grief because the last time I was at the Taj Mahal, I was with my grandmothe­r, and I remembered this promise I always made to her over the phone that I would bring my kids to meet her. So, I was standing there missing her but also strongly feeling her presence, and almost the entire story of ‘ The Parted Earth’ came to me in that moment.”

As for “Southbound,” which publishes April 15, it was originally conceived as a collection of previously published essays along with a few new ones. But between proposing the book and submitting the manuscript, Enjeti had undergone a transforma­tion. She’d been an activist since her youth, focused on women’s issues such as domestic abuse and reproducti­ve rights, but the 2016 presidenti­al election changed that. For the first time, Enjeti’s activism turned partisan, and she focused her attention on the Democratic party.

Enjeti helped rally Asian Americans in Georgia’s 6th Congressio­nal District and campaigned hard, starting with Jon Ossoff ’s failed bid for a seat in the U. S. House in 2017. In 2019, she founded the Georgia chapter of They See Blue, an organizati­on of South Asian Democrats that numbers 500 members, and this fall, she served on the Georgia Biden- Harris Asian American Leadership Council. Currently, she is campaignin­g for Democrats in Georgia’s upcoming runoff elections.

As a result of those experience­s, Enjeti sees things differentl­y than she did when she wrote her previous essays. “I asked myself if I would write them today, and I wouldn’t,” she said. So, she tossed out all but four — and wrote 18 new ones.

“( The book) became less about me experienci­ng racism in the South, and it became more about me being part of the problem of racism in the South,” Enjeti said. “It’s not so much me as the victim, but me as the aggressor, me as being complicit, me being silent, even, in situations where I needed to speak up and say something. Once I realized that was the story I needed to tell, then the whole book changed, and I couldn’t go back and resuscitat­e and revise those same essays. I wasn’t the same person.”

Asked what she’s most thankful for this year, Enjeti pointed to the activists in Georgia she calls her teachers and mentors. “They put up with my ignorance and inexperien­ce and have given me the guidance and support that I needed. I wouldn’t be able to do this without them,” she said.

That sentiment also applies to her writing career, she said. “I feel like I’m lucky, actually. I have always had people rallying around me, whether it’s the writing, whether it’s the activism. I’ve been lucky to be adopted in the sisterhood of people who have no reason to trust my talent, or trust my motivation, but for whatever reason opened the door to me to be in their spaces. They deserve all the credit, to be quite honest. They offered a hand, and I’ve taken them up on it.”

What Enjeti calls luck I call talent and persistenc­e. Either way, her success is well deserved.

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 ??  ?? Anjali Enjeti tossed all but 4 essays she wrote before 2016, wrote anew.
Anjali Enjeti tossed all but 4 essays she wrote before 2016, wrote anew.

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