Writing it right

Novels, plays, short stories and books on children…Shreekumar Varma has written them all. DIVYA KUMAR on his literary journey

April 09, 2010 05:22 pm | Updated 05:23 pm IST

Shreekumar Varma. Photo: S.S. Kumar

Shreekumar Varma. Photo: S.S. Kumar

Things can get a bit chess-game like in this writer's study. Novel A gets cut by Novel B which in turn might get overtaken at any time by Play C or even Children's Book D…

Welcome to the world of Shreekumar Varma, the multi-tasking writer. His website lists four things under ‘Work in Progress' (“I actually deleted two others yesterday”) and his output in the last decade includes two published novels, two plays staged by the Madras Players, three children's books, and contributions to a whole bunch of short story anthologies. And that doesn't count the columns and articles he's done for newspapers or his forays into poetry. Or, of course, the projects that have fallen behind.

“It's all very exciting,” he says, adding drolly, “But really, what I'm best at is not doing anything at all. I just seem prolific because a lot of things have come out around the same time.”

Nice try but no dice, Mr. Varma. The publishing world may not have always been kind to him (“The problem is that publishers always seem to want me to produce something else first when I approach them with an idea… and they specify exactly what they want too!”), but Shree's mantra has been ‘just keep writing.' And just keep sending works off to various competitions.

Driven by contests

“I have a compulsive urge to send entries to contests — I don't know why,” he laughs. “I started small, with a couple of short stories, but by the time my play The Dark Lord (1986) came second at a British Council competition and Bow of Rama (1993) won The Hindu -Madras Players Playscripts contest, I was safely into contest mode.”

His recently-published second novel, Maria's Room was long-listed for the inaugural Man Asian Literary Prize and his recently-staged play Midnight Hotel was long-listed for the MetroPlus Playwright Award, leading the author to ruefully refer to himself as the ‘long-list expert'.

But Shree has a whole lot more than a proclivity to land himself in long-lists going for him. The veteran journalist began his career with a newspaper in Mumbai and hung out with the likes of Amjad Khan (who spouted shayari to him), Raj Kapoor, Dilip Kumar and Dev Anand (who invited him to join a political party he was starting) while writing for Cinema Today, owned a small press and even started his own magazine at one point. He's also taught journalism and English Literature at his alma mater Madras Christian College, and for the last 11 years, Creative English at the Chennai Mathematical Institute.

“I do enjoy teaching, and I find that science students often come up with more out-of-the-box thinking than literature students do,” he says, thoughtfully. “I love encouraging people in whom I sense talent for writing — I literally pester them to write.”

Other loves include magic (“I used to do illusions all the time as a kid”) and the spooky and fantastical (“Those are recurring themes in my work, though I never had the courage to put in an actual ghost until Midnight Hotel ”), music, especially classical (“I love Shree raga, it brings tears to my eyes — and I'm not being self-obsessed!”) and the big one, films (“Movies have always been a major inspiration… before I die, I want to make a movie.”)

‘Unfortunate novel'

In typical Shree style, he tells me how he's actually converted a couple of his works into scripts for filmmakers, but nothing panned out (so, naturally, he just went and wrote a couple of novels in the interim.) He jokes light-heartedly about Three Monkeys , the ‘unfortunate' novel that always ends up being put on hold (checkmated?) while others take over ( Maria's Room , for example), his non-fiction book on Chennai requested by a publisher that he never gets around to writing (“It hangs like a terrible shadow over me,” he says mock-theatrically. “With my last breath I'll say, ‘That Chennai book…'”) and his up-coming novel on Chennai, The Gayatri Club in which Chennaiites will see a lot of familiar characters (“The eccentric ones won't be mentioned by name,” he says with a wink).

But he turns serious as we talk about his fascinating lineage — as the grandson of Sethu Lakshmi Bai, Maharani of Travancore State, and great-grandson of the legendary Raja Ravi Varma.

“I'm really proud to belong to that family — I believe my cousins and I have all inherited a certain artistic sensibility, and also a tradition of stories, some of which went into my first novel, Lament of Mohini ,” he says, “But sometimes it's difficult when that heritage is applauded more than my accomplishments.”

0 / 0
Sign in to unlock member-only benefits!
  • Access 10 free stories every month
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign-up/manage your newsletter subscriptions with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early access to discounts & offers on our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide by our community guidelines for posting your comments.

We have migrated to a new commenting platform. If you are already a registered user of The Hindu and logged in, you may continue to engage with our articles. If you do not have an account please register and login to post comments. Users can access their older comments by logging into their accounts on Vuukle.