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professional Manu Bhattathiri’s debut novel, ‘The Town That
Laughed’ focuses on the fictional village of Karuthupuzha in Kerala
By
Shevlin Sebastian
On
most days, when he was writing 'The Town That Laughed' (Aleph Book
Company), Manu Bhattathiri would awaken with images of the fictional
village of Karuthupuzha in Kerala. He would get up, get ready and go
for a walk and mull over what he was going to write. Then, at 7.30
a.m. the Bangalore-based author would sit at his desk and write for
exactly one hour. “I deliberately did not do more,” he says.
“When you stretch it a bit, the sweat shows.”
Eight
months later, the 254-page novel was done. And it is a highly
engaging one. Written in a relaxed style, Manu, with deft sentences,
is able to bring the characters alive and cast a spell on the reader.
These
are people, many of them eccentric, who inhabit most small towns and
villages in India. In 'The Town', there is the local drunk, Joby, and
the just-retired Inspector Paachu Yemaan, who is bleakly suffering
the loss of power and prestige, Paachu's long-suffering but inwardly
strong wife Sharada, the barber Sureshan, the local cops, Inspector
Janardhanan and Constable Chandy, Joby's wife Rosykutty, the love
affair between Kannan Maash and Ambili Teacher, among many other
interesting people. It is an affectionate and humourous portrait of
human beings and their foibles.
But
village life is an unusual subject for Manu since he grew up in North
India, in places like Boleng in Arunachal Pradesh, Tezpur in Assam,
and Udhampur in Jammu and Kashmir. His father worked in the Border
Roads Organisation, which builds roads for the Army.
But
once every two years, the family would spend the summer vacation at
Manu's maternal grandfather's village of Cherupoika in Kollam
district, Kerala. “There was an aura to the village as far as I was
concerned,” says Manu. “It was so different from our life in the
north.”
As a
boy, Manu was enamoured of the village folk, and the beauty of
Nature. “There were a lot of paddy fields around, a small river,
and dense foliage all around,” he says. “You could always get a
fresh smell.”
And
to top that, his grandfather, M
N Vasudevan Bhattathiri, a Sanskrit teacher, was
a fount of stories. “They were usually tales from the Mahabharat
and Ramayana,” he says. “But it is not that I have been told the
stories in exactly the way I have heard it. Instead, I mixed my
memories with my imagination and produced some original characters.”
Incidentally,
this is Manu's second book. His first book, 'Savithri's Special Room
And Other Stories' also dipped into the memories of Cherupoika. And
it was well received both by readers and critics. In fact, the book
was short-listed for the Crossword Book Award (Fiction) for 2018 and
was on the long list of the Tata Literature Live Award for 2016.
In
his daily life, Manu runs an advertising firm, ‘Cheers
Communications’ with a partner Sudhir PR. But he has regrets
regarding his career. “In advertising, your desire to write is
falsely fulfilled,” says Manu. “You are only writing headlines
and body copy. It set me back by 15 years.”
Asked
whether he has more books inside him, Manu smiles and says, “I have
a library inside me. If I keep my focus and interest levels, I could
write many books. But the publicity that is given to books and
authors is a bit disappointing these days.”
Not
to forget the intense distraction of readers because of the mobile
phone. “I agree,” says Manu. “People read five pages of a book
and then they decide that they now need to check their mobile phones.
Because of screen addiction, there is a persistent need to look at
the mobile, laptop, television or the cinema screen. We need to do
something about it. Otherwise, we will become shallow and
superficial.”
(Sunday
Magazine, The New Indian Express, South India and Delhi)
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