Interview with the author- Ritu Lalit, who has penned two books: "A bowful of Butterflies" and upcoming- "Hilawi".
1. When your first book- A Bowful of Butterflies came
out, what was the reaction of people around you- Parents, children, friends,
neighbours, relatives etc?
A lot of them were not as surprised as I was. Apparently as a kid, I had told people that I
would write my own novel. An uncle said,
“You are a voracious reader, so it was just a matter of time that you would
write your own book.”
2. What exactly your latest book- Hilawi is all about? Because the title of the
book is itself a strange word for many of us?
HILAWI is a word I coined. “Jo hila kar rakh de”. As the book trailer explains, at the time of
the churning of the ocean, a young slave girl, barely fourteen, tries to flee
the warring gods and demons.
Inadvertently she takes a magical object churned out of the ocean. This object had to be given a name … so I
coined the word HILAWI
3. How much long did it take to write this book from the moment you started
developing the story to start writing it till completing it finally with
editing and all?
Actually writing a story does not take more than three to
four months for me. But then my editing
takes over. I revise, edit, discard a
lot, add a lot. That takes a huge amount
of time. In the flow of writing I do not
like to stop and think – I just keep developing events and scenes, many of
which I chop off later. “A Bowlful of
Butterflies” was written in 50 days, the final shape came together after 7
months. Hilawi took longer, roughly
about ten months to come together.
4. when do you write as you are not a Full Time Writer and its not easy to find
time after coming back at home in evening?
I do not sleep much … and the night is very peaceful and
conducive to writing.
5. What exactly do you want to spread in society as a Writer?
I am not much of an advise giver or prone to giving
motivational speeches. So I have no
message to give, apart from one. I am a
woman, and hence all my women characters are strong, passionate and real. They are not sex objects or sacrificial
goats. So I guess that is my message …
6. As Indian authors are accused for degrading the quality of English and not
giving a chance for readers to learn something new, can we expect some Good
vocabulary, idioms, phrases, one-word substitutions etc from you ?
I do not like using weak grammar and it irritates me to
read a poorly spelled word or a badly worded sentence. It is possible to write a simple story with
easy words. In fact simplicity is
beautiful, and I want my story to be read by all so I try to use simple
words. I am a writer and not an English
teacher, but hope I can not be clubbed with writers who degrade the quality of
English.
7. Indian Publishing is too hard to deal with, was it easy for you to get a
Publisher or did u wait for a long time to get your work published (Regarding
your first book)?
I guess I was lucky.
I had submitted my book (A Bowlful of Butterflies) to an agent who rejected it outright. It annoyed me a lot. In a spirit of “How dare he” I sent it to
Rupa & Co. directly. But the
rejection bothered me so I worked harder on the manuscript and polished
it. Rupa accepted it in three months,
and I was on tenterhooks, because the original manuscript had been
changed! So I talked to the editor who
laughed and said, “No problem, we’ll publish your latest version”. So I guess it worked out for me.
8. What are the Promotional strategies that you and your publisher have applied
to promote/market your book- Hilawi?
Not many, just the usual.
I have made a trailer which I am promoting through Youtube and my
blog. I am giving interviews like this
one. The publisher on their part is
sending out press releases. I do hope
people like the book and write reviews.
9. After seeing the success of Five Point Someone, that it was adapted as a
Blockbuster movie later on, did you ever feel as if your books can also achieve
this feat or are you working on building some contacts to get your books turned
into visual format?
I really don’t know.
I have not seen that far ahead. I
am just concentrating on writing quality books.
If someone approaches me, I may consider. But I am a blogger and writer – not a movie
maker. So I will concentrate on doing
what I know.
10. What exactly is your target from your Books- 1. Getting most copies sold
out, 2. Getting the love of readers or 3. You just wrote it because you wanted
to write a book once in your life, hence you have no targets?
Oh I am a drama queen.
I want it all, love of the readers, being on the best seller list,
getting fame and fortune! And why
not? One only lives one life eh?
11. In the end, tell us in 5-7 lines, what speech will you give if you win a
Major Award for the Best Indian Author for your books?
This is a message I would like to give my readers
irrespective of the fact that I may or may not win any major award …
Thank you all for
loving me so much! You have encouraged
me and so I am going to go back to the key board and dream up more stories for
you.
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