Paradise in the mirror Renu Dhole
Monday, October 13th, 2008 AT 4:10 PM
Tags: Sudeep Chakravarti,
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"Goa has its charm and follies, its greed and grouses, its colourful
characters and peerless natural beauty, debates of a colonial past and
post-colonial future, and its seamy side that can rival any banana republic.
Goa is larger than life, almost fantastic," writer Sudeep Chakravarti says.

With palpable passion he talks about the land that forms the subject and
setting of Once Upon a Time in Aparanta, his second novel after Tin Fish (a
story about a turbulent time in India's history told through a growing up
saga of a bunch of boys) and Red Sun (a non-fiction work about Marxist
revolutions in India). "Once Upon… questions the idea of 'paradise' and what
happens when a self-proclaimed 'paradise' comes to face itself in the
mirror. In the end, it is, for me, a celebration of spirit, it's as if the
land has had enough, and wants to reclaim itself from marauders and
abusers," he continues, summing up his book.

Chakravarti's long journalistic career and his zeal for intimate story
telling come together beautifully to create a rich, nuanced world of
colours, flavours, smells and characters that inhabit the "timeless" Eden,
and to make an earnest plea to save this paradise from losing its soul. What
comes through clearly is his deep personal and intellectual association of
20 years (he moved to Goa in mid-2004) with the "land at the horizon".
"While the discovery of the soul of Goa is an ongoing process, and one that
will likely take a lifetime, living here has increased manifold my
engagement with Goa. This is natural and organic. It is vital to me. And it
impelled me to tell this story," he says, dismissing critiques which accuse
him of being an 'outsider' writing a book on Goa and questioning its
institutions.

The story, though lyrical, sets out to create an impact. Though the book's
primary target readers are those, for whom, the story evokes a personal
nostalgia of Goa and who can actually help save it, Chakaravarti tells us of
interesting responses he got from non-natives. "In Mumbai, it was
interesting to see the actor Tom Alter, who read brilliantly from the book
at its launch, be moved to speak of his childhood home of Mussourie, another
'paradise' that has experienced the cycle of death and partial
resurrection. The expatriates as well as others, who've visited or lived in
Goa or such 'paradises' across the globe, were present at the launch. They
knew exactly the context of the book," he states.

Chakravarti knows the impact that a journalistic article or a
well-researched piece of non-fiction can have. Yet, he chose fiction to
address a contemporary socio-political problem. "To tell the story that I
wanted to, bring alive the son et lumiere aspect of Goa, discuss society,
history and politics, portray anger and aspiration, expose the rot and
provide a platform to the future, it had to be fiction. The genre of fiction
provided the necessary distance from daily happenings and imbue soul. A
novel takes a story beyond the boundaries of a particular publication's
readership," he explains.

So was there, at any point, a conflict between the well-informed
journalistic trying to make a point and the impassioned story-teller trying
to bring alive a world of characters and their relationships? "Only in the
beginning, as I wrote the first draft. I realised that sometimes, reportage
was seeping deeply into the narrative. While reportage is vital as it
provides authentic background, colour, speech patterns and such, I had to
tone down the baldness of plain fact to weave it into the story," he
replies.

The writer is currently working on the second book in the Tin Fish trilogy
and is planning two more novels, and a collection of short stories.

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