Andaleeb Wajid's Blog, page 7
December 27, 2012
Press
Here are the links to some of my interviews -
Write on – Femina, January 2012
Writing for herself – The Hindu, Life & Style
Unveiling Love and Life – The Hindu
A new voice – Indian Express
The Middle Class Indian Life – Illume Magazine
Blinkers Off
College days are some of the best days of our lives. With a lot of memories, some imagination and plenty of wishful thinking, I sat down to write Blinkers Off to recapture the mood and essence of those days today. Blinkers Off is not strictly a campus caper but it’s a fun ride, so don’t forget to hop on next month when the book is available in bookstores across India.
Join Noor as she struggles between finding the perfect retort for Supriya or simply speaking an intelligible sentence when Dennis is around. Find out how she manages to make a documentary from the wedding that wasn’t!
Kite Strings
Kite Strings is now available as a Kindle e-book. You can pick up a copy here. This 2012 edition of my first novel is tighter, sharper, more focused and better edited. Here’s a look at the cover image designed by Nusrat Abbasi.
February 17, 2012
An update of sorts
'It's a bit like you're having triplets!', my friend Judy exclaimed when I told her that it was quite possible that three of my books would get published this year. She's not far off the mark though because each book does feel like a baby that you're sending out into the world.
Coming up first in June is my third book, My Brother's Wedding. Technically this was my 4th book which I wrote last year in March. I took less than two months to finish it because it was that kind of a book. Dogging me, following me, pursuing me until I finished it and typed 'The End'.
Following this, I'm not sure of the order in which they will be published, but I've got The Big 3-Ohh!!, my actual 3rd book (which I rewrote completely after writing 150 pages) and More than Just Biryani.
It promises to be a full year ahead, what with editing these books, working on cover designs, writing blurbs and synopses, marketing them, reaching out to the public and pulling my hair out, not necessarily in that order.
Since My Brother's Wedding is coming up first, I'd like to talk a little more about it. As the title says, it's about a wedding. I've always been amazed at how an entire household changes when there's talk of a wedding in the family. And this change isn't necessarily for the better. Years ago, I was studying for my II PUC exams, the finals, mind you, and my cousin was getting engaged. I had my Chemistry exam, (Organic Chem ok?) one day after his engagement and I just couldn't study. All this, despite the fact that the preparations weren't taking place in my house. It was the first wedding in the family after quite a few years and the excitement was palpable. I was torn between cramming for exams and being a part of the excitement.
In recent times there has been pretty much an explosion of weddings at home and there was one just a couple of weeks back. I'm not laying the groundwork here to explain why I am obsessed with weddings. Just saying that it's never been far from my mind.
The idea for this book presented itself to me while we were going to Chennai to invite people for my sister's wedding (see?) and I quickly jotted down notes on my phone, hoping to remember some of it when I got back. I had to wait for 2 months before I could put the plan into action and well, I did.
It's a pretty simple story actually. There's this girl. And her brother is getting married. Soon. In the space of a few months, everything in her life turns upside down and there are some very interesting developments in her personal life as well. And there's a blog which she starts writing. It's called My Brother's Wedding.
Watch out for more updates soon. My Brother's Wedding is currently being edited and cover design is also being worked out as well.
My Brother's Wedding is being published by Rupa Publishers and should be in bookstores by June end.
October 7, 2011
Planning a book and entering the literary Hogwarts
This is totally the wrong time for me to be writing this post. That's because I'm trying to finish writing my fifth novel, More than Just Biryani and I'm reaching that zombie stage soon where nothing else matters but getting the story out. But this book has been an important journey for me as a writer and I have seen my writing style evolve and I'd like to put down some of the thoughts I've had about writing in general.
If you're thinking of writing a book, take it from someone who has written four without knowing what she's doing, make a plan.
Yes, make that plan because sometimes it helps. I have written four books without having any sort of plan in my head and I can't tell you how grateful I am that things worked out and fell in place beautifully completely on their own. But that can't keep happening all the time. Also, it's always better to have a plan. I used to think that a plan would constrict my creativity but it doesn't have to because you don't really have to stick to the plan. That's the beauty of it.
At my book launch, Shinie asked me an interesting question about my style of writing and I told her that I would compare myself to the young wizards in Harry Potter who couldn't control their magic until they reached Hogwarts. For four books, I was unable to control the magic, letting it control me instead. Mind you, I don't regret it. But it's not always fun not knowing what's going to happen in a book. Also, I think I'm growing old. And I think I've finally entered the literary version of Hogwarts because I find myself planning my book.
So, what does planning a book entail?
I don't really know because I didn't learn it formally. But here's what I've been doing with MTJB. I took a notebook and pen and started writing down everything that had been fermenting in my head about the book. Of course, before this you have to have an idea. But that's fodder for another post. Let's focus on the plan for now.
So you have your idea and you start writing down everything that you can think of it in your notebook. Just keep the words coming even if they don't make any sense. And then sit down and think about the central conflict in the novel. Because there has to be conflict and resolution in a book. Once this is clear in your head, you can start planning everything, right from character names, their jobs, their lives and their stories.
Sometimes, you can even write down briefly what's going to happen in each chapter. Just the gist so you know where the story's heading. But the best part is that you don't have to stick to this plan. Give yourself the freedom to change things around wherever you want but try and maintain the original structure you had in mind.
God, I hope I haven't come off sounding like an obnoxious know-it-all type. I haven't? Good. Oh, I have? Well, I do have four books behind me, so that's bound to rub off somewhere, right?
August 19, 2011
The second time isn’t easier
You know what they all say. The first time is when things are pretty difficult. With anything actually. Especially with publishing a book. The first time was crazy, with me trying out my luck with nearly 13 publishers before I managed to get Kite Strings out there.
But the second time was relatively easier. With Blinkers Off, I found a publisher in around 5 months as opposed to the 4 years I spent fruitlessly waiting to get published with Kite Strings. Things moved quickly and soon we started editing and proofing and voila, Blinkers Off is out there in the market (not all the bookstores as yet, unfortunately).
However, plenty of people have already picked it up online and have messaged me on FB or Twitter telling me that they have bought my book which makes me feel so happy. I was nervous before the first feedback started pouring in, but now I’m okay. I mean, Blinkers Off is not the best book I’ve written and I know I’m really capable of much better, but still, it’s an entertaining book and whoever has read it has really, really liked it so far! Has to mean something, right?
So, public feedback is pretty much out of the way now. It’s the launch that has started to worry me. A lot.
See, I’ve attended plenty of book launches. I’ve seen nervous authors read out passages from their books, interact shakily with the chief guests and sometimes royally bore the audience. I’d like to think the launch of my first book was not like that. It was pretty formal with Wendy M’am giving her awesome critique of my book – she was my English lecturer back in college, and believe me, getting praised by her still ranks among my topmost favourite moments of my life. Then I got on the podium (I dislike this whole podium business by the way because it reminds me of assembly in school) and spoke a lot of emotional drivel which moved my mom and some others to tears but we quickly wrapped up and it was an enjoyable evening for me and hopefully some of the others.
Now, with Blinkers Off, I don’t want to repeat the same thing. I mean, there’s only so much I can say about accomplishing my dream and telling others to go live their dream right? So, what am I going to talk about? Inside my head, I’m like…help!!! This is so going to become one of those launches where the audience cannot wait to escape (without buying copies of my book) home and the chief guests and I will stare at each other red faced.
See, from what I know, there’s not much that we can actually discuss about the book without giving away too much. There are plot twists and turns in it that I would like the readers to discover on their own. Also, I don’t get it when the author and others on the dais talk about the book (which many have not had the chance to read as yet) endlessly and the audience has no idea what’s going on.
So that leaves me with the question, what can I do at my book launch? You know, to entertain the audience while keeping my book in the frame, without boring them and making them hate my book before they even take a look at it?
Any ideas peeps? (My book launch is scheduled for early September and my book is a young adult novel about a young girl who dreams of becoming a screenplay writer. Err…as if you didn’t know the last part already, I’ve said it that many times to anyone who’s bothered to listen!)
So, any ideas? Please don’t tell me to sing or dance since I asked about entertaining the audience. That is not what I had in mind. Really.
The second time isn't easier
You know what they all say. The first time is when things are pretty difficult. With anything actually. Especially with publishing a book. The first time was crazy, with me trying out my luck with nearly 13 publishers before I managed to get Kite Strings out there.
But the second time was relatively easier. With Blinkers Off, I found a publisher in around 5 months as opposed to the 4 years I spent fruitlessly waiting to get published with Kite Strings. Things moved quickly and soon we started editing and proofing and voila, Blinkers Off is out there in the market (not all the bookstores as yet, unfortunately).
However, plenty of people have already picked it up online and have messaged me on FB or Twitter telling me that they have bought my book which makes me feel so happy. I was nervous before the first feedback started pouring in, but now I'm okay. I mean, Blinkers Off is not the best book I've written and I know I'm really capable of much better, but still, it's an entertaining book and whoever has read it has really, really liked it so far! Has to mean something, right?
So, public feedback is pretty much out of the way now. It's the launch that has started to worry me. A lot.
See, I've attended plenty of book launches. I've seen nervous authors read out passages from their books, interact shakily with the chief guests and sometimes royally bore the audience. I'd like to think the launch of my first book was not like that. It was pretty formal with Wendy M'am giving her awesome critique of my book – she was my English lecturer back in college, and believe me, getting praised by her still ranks among my topmost favourite moments of my life. Then I got on the podium (I dislike this whole podium business by the way because it reminds me of assembly in school) and spoke a lot of emotional drivel which moved my mom and some others to tears but we quickly wrapped up and it was an enjoyable evening for me and hopefully some of the others.
Now, with Blinkers Off, I don't want to repeat the same thing. I mean, there's only so much I can say about accomplishing my dream and telling others to go live their dream right? So, what am I going to talk about? Inside my head, I'm like…help!!! This is so going to become one of those launches where the audience cannot wait to escape (without buying copies of my book) home and the chief guests and I will stare at each other red faced.
See, from what I know, there's not much that we can actually discuss about the book without giving away too much. There are plot twists and turns in it that I would like the readers to discover on their own. Also, I don't get it when the author and others on the dais talk about the book (which many have not had the chance to read as yet) endlessly and the audience has no idea what's going on.
So that leaves me with the question, what can I do at my book launch? You know, to entertain the audience while keeping my book in the frame, without boring them and making them hate my book before they even take a look at it?
Any ideas peeps? (My book launch is scheduled for early September and my book is a young adult novel about a young girl who dreams of becoming a screenplay writer. Err…as if you didn't know the last part already, I've said it that many times to anyone who's bothered to listen!)
So, any ideas? Please don't tell me to sing or dance since I asked about entertaining the audience. That is not what I had in mind. Really.
July 8, 2011
The Wedding Genre
For some reason, I've always found it confusing to slot my books into any particular genre. Of late, I learnt that they fit into the Young Adult category. I had a vague feeling that it might be the case but I wasn't sure because I don't quite know exactly which age group comprises of young adults. Also, I find such generalizations limiting. I don't think books are meant for any age group but anyone can read any book that they find interesting or which they can comprehend. I mean, it's not as if books are like watching movies for restricted age groups. There you might not be allowed to enter the cinema hall if you're not of a certain age. (And that can also be bypassed today thanks to movie downloads and DVDs). With books, restricting younger people from reading certain books doesn't quite work. If a book is lying around in the house and they are sufficiently curious, nothing will stop them from reading it.
Right, so you might have surmised by now that I read quite a few books that ideally I shouldn't have because I was not the right age or they were not the right genre for me. So, in that aspect, telling people I have written a Young Adult book immediately limits my audience. Even those who may have wanted to read it might feel a bit wary and reserved because of the whole issue of being 'seen' with a book of a certain category.
Anyhow, so as I was saying, I would like people of all ages to read my book without having that feeling inside that they're reading a book that was not meant for them. In fact, one of my favourite readers, Uncle OT (whose gender and age are still unknown to us) defeats this very slotting of books into genres because he likes all my books. Even Blinkers Off. I recently sent him My Brother's Wedding and I hope he will like that too.
Which brings me to my next book My Brother's Wedding. It wasn't until I was well onto finishing it that I realized, three out of my four books have weddings in them. In fact, the weddings play important roles in shaping the stories. Or in the case of my last book, they are the story.
It got me thinking a bit. Why the heck am I so obsessed with weddings? I don't know. Maybe because there's not much in way of a social life for us, that weddings are the only place where we dress up and meet relatives and have fun. (yeah right) But there's so much dynamism around a wedding, especially an Indian one that it would be a shame to not write about it. And so I did.
And that my friends, is how years later I will be credited with having created the Wedding Genre. No really.
June 30, 2011
Loading, loading, loading…
If you get irritated when you see Abhishek Bachchan go 'Loading, loading, loading' on the Idea 3G ad, then raise your hands. Umm…better yet, read the rest of this post.
I feel a bit like him, waiting and waiting and waiting for what seems like ages to see my book in print. Okay, what is my problem? Blinkers Off is getting published at lightning speed compared to Kite Strings or even to books by my friends which have been accepted elsewhere. Compared to all these, my publishers are super fast indeed. So I should be happy.
Instead I'm getting bored. I'm waiting for things to happen and it feels like I've been waiting too long already. Whew. I need lessons in patience. The next best thing to do while waiting is to write something else.
So, I've restarted work on my book More than Just Biryani. However, it's in a completely new avatar now. It's not a cookbook. It's a food book which I think means that food plays an important role in shaping the lives of the protagonists in the book. So far I've written 9 chapters and I kind of like how its shaping up. But there's so much to be done! I mean, I've just barely scratched the surface of this book, so that kind of overwhelms me sometimes. But with four books behind me, if there's one thing I know, it's that old and overused cliche and nothing is impossible. Really.
June 23, 2011
Some great news!
There are times when I still can't believe all this is happening. By all this, I mean, Blinkers Off getting published in less than a year since I wrote it. But that goes to show how little we tend to expect from our own lives.
Last year, my sister got married and I was very busy with my mother, inviting people, shopping for clothes and other things and one such weekend in November, we were traveling to Chennai and Vellore to invite relatives and family members who lived there.
Close friends and family members know that last year we were in an accident that could have changed our lives horribly forever, but Allah spared us and we escaped with barely a few scratches. Ever since then, I'm not too comfortable traveling on the highway. Also, last year around the time we went for the invitations, we had heard of another family who had met with a horrific accident and everyone in the car had died. So you can imagine how I felt when I had to sit in the front with Mansoor. Every truck that went by looked as though it would topple on us.
To stop all these ghastly images and thoughts from playing havoc with my sanity, I tried to think of something else, and with the wedding on my head, my mind started playing out the scenario of a new story (revolving around a wedding). I was excited but a little dubious. At that time, I was already writing another book (more on that later) and I didn't know if I could pull this one off. But the idea was so cool and seemed like such fun that I quickly jotted it down in case I forgot about it.
Usually, I prefer to write blind. As in, I often don't know what's happening with the story until just before I start typing. Even then, I let my mind take me through all sorts of tangents and twists. But this story was so amazing that I had everything, right till the very last scene in my head.
(If Mansoor had taken his eyes off the road, he might have wondered why I looked like some maniac, scrabbling around for pen and paper or a computer so I could write it immediately)
But I'm also this very boring and straight type of person. I couldn't leave that other story midway right? So I came back to Bangalore, wrote two chapters of the new book, just to make it real in my head so I wouldn't forget it, and then went back to the other book.
And finished it. In January this year. And then I gave myself a gap of barely a month before I started writing this new book. And finished it in less than two months. And just yesterday, I heard from my publishers. My Brother's Wedding has been accepted at Rupa. Yay me!


