Interview: Ashok Banker, author of the new Ramayana - Page 2

So what you will be reading are his unedited email responses to my questions. Enjoy.


(This is part one of a two part interview. Look for part two tomorrow.)

There are few people in North America who know anything about you. Could you fill you in some of your biographical details, where you are from, why you write. You are pretty open about your less than ideal childhood, could you tell us how that influenced your writing?

I was born and brought up in Bombay, now Mumbai, lived here all my life. My mother was an Anglo-Indian (please don't use the term "East Indian") and her mother, my grandmother, was Dutch-Irish-Scots. My grandma, in addition to being of foreign descent, was brought up by nuns in a convent school in Sri Lanka, and came to India in her twenties, first staying at Chennai (then called Madras) and later Mumbai (Bombay). She met and married a Goan Catholic, and had three kids in Byculla, a very central area of the city then, a kind of Brooklyn with a very mixed immigrant population of over 300,000 Jews (who came here escaping the Nazis during WWII), Muslims, Parsis, American Methodists, Episcopalians, Baptists, and of course, Goan Catholics, Chinese immigrants, and a few Hindus too.

My mother grew up there and was a very precocious girl, quitting school, rebelling, modeling (quite successfully), and generally being a much talked-about young woman of the time. She met my biological father, a US-and-Canada returned Gujarati Hindu who drove a Jaguar (brought back from the US), the son of rich parents, and they married three months later, when she was still only 16. It was a disaster; they split up, and she came back to Byculla to live with her mother, where she had me.

My mother's life was ruined after the divorce, and she as well as my grandmother largely brought me up, mostly in Byculla as well as a number of homes in and around Bombay. I went to nine different schools, was sexually abused at a boarding school, and had a number of "adventures" as a young boy, none of them pleasant, mostly violent, and involving family members engaged in drugs, alcohol, and petty crimes. I read a lot, wrote a lot, and descended into writing as a means of survival, not escape. I wanted to record what I was going through because I never thought I would make it out alive.

Continued on the next page Page 1 — Page 2 — Page 3Page 4Page 5Page 6

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Article Author: Richard Marcus

Richard Marcus is the author of the forthcoming book What Will Happen In Eragon IV? and has had his work published in print and on line all over the world. The not so long-haired Canadian iconoclast writes reviews and opines on the world as he sees …

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Article comments

  • 1 - Mickey

    Aug 18, 2005 at 6:50 pm

    Excellent interview !! Here's hoping things are better in Bombay....

  • 2 - Mickey

    Aug 18, 2005 at 6:53 pm

    This gentleman seems to be a budding Indian JK Rowling...

  • 3 - Aaman

    Aug 18, 2005 at 10:19 pm

    Great stuff, gypsyman - I've read Mr Banker's early novels as well - they were interesting, if derivative, yet different from the rest of the Indian English scene.

    What about Byculla Boy - that was originally a 900-page manuscript that was published as a 250-page book. I hear he is re-publishing it.

  • 4 - Aaman

    Aug 18, 2005 at 10:29 pm

    Also, what news of the Mahabharata series he was working on? and the film work

  • 5 - gypsyman

    Aug 19, 2005 at 1:48 am

    Stayed tuned for part two today! But he was extremly reluctant to talk about any forthcoming projects...refering people to his website and blog for more information as progects are developed.

    But that being said, I did get him to talk about the "movie" which it turns out is not a movie...you'll see what I mean.

  • 6 - Ashok K. Banker

    Aug 23, 2005 at 2:12 am

    Hi Aaman, all,

    Those who know me also know that I much prefer answering questions directly, individually, rather than tomtomming things in an interview or through the mass media. I am indeed trying to re-edit my original manuscript of Byculla Boy and hope to republish it sometime in 2006. It is linked to my other novel Vertigo, which I was able to republish earlier this year and which is a personal favourite. The book and 'video essay' or docufeature Beautiful Ugly are also directly related to Vertigo and Byculla Boy.

    I am already writing the Mahabharata and you should see the first book The Seeds of War in Indian bookstores by end 2006. To know more about my other projects, you're welcome to visit my website and blog, or to email me directly.

    Best wishes

    Ashok

  • 7 - JOSEPHINE

    Feb 01, 2006 at 5:03 pm

    MY DAUGHTER AND I READ YOUR BOOK, Prince Of Ayodhya ...AND ENJOYED IT SO VERY MUCH...LOOKING FORWARD TO READING THE OTHERS NOW THAT WE HAVE DISCOVERED YOU....MY GODSON LIVES IN KANPUR, INDIA AND I TRY TO READ AS MUCH ABOUT HIS COUNTRY AS POSSIBLE...THANKS FOR SHARING YOUR WONDERFUL STORY WITH US..SINCERELY...JOSEPHINE D.

  • 8 - Ashok Banker

    Feb 02, 2006 at 2:56 am

    Hi Josephine,

    Thanks for those wonderful heart-warming words. Always a pleasure to know I brought something new into the lives of total strangers!

    If you wish, you could visit my official website and perhaps join in our Epic India group or simply browse through the forums. You'll find many interesting discussions on India and all things Indian there, including (but not only about) my books.

    And I do hope you enjoy reading the rest of the series as much as you did the first book.

  • 9 - Vijay Kurhade

    Mar 14, 2006 at 6:03 am

    any way to contact this author bu email

  • 10 - gypsyman

    Mar 14, 2006 at 9:55 am

    Vijay

    Unforntunately Ashok has had to stop responding to emails because he was receiving far to many annoying requests as well as harrassment. If you want to get in touch with him, you can visit his web site www.epicindia.com, where there is an area to leave comments. He will always respond.

    There is also a forum on the site which he posts at regularly, and responds to posts addresed to him, or if you really want direct access you can also apply to join his yahoo group. There are links to all of these things at his web portal.

    cheers

    gypsyman

  • 11 - NERISHA

    Jul 31, 2006 at 6:47 am

    DEAR MR BANKER
    I HAVE READ 3 OF YOUR BOOKS, FIRST BEING DEMONS OF CHIRAKAUT, THEN SEIGE OF MITHILIA AND EVENUTALLY THE PRINCE OF AYODAYA -WHICH WAS ABSOLUTELY FASCINATING - YOUR STORY-TELLING IS WONDERFUL - CANNOT WAIT TO READ THE OTHER BOOKS I AM TRYING TO GET A FRIEND WHO WILL VISIT INDIA SOON TO PURCHASE ALL YOUR BOOKS SOON. ALSO READ SOME SECTIONS OF THE BOOKS TO MY CHILDREN - AGED 13 AND 7 - BOTH WERE IN AWE
    WE LOOK FORWARD TO READING THE BALANCE OF YOUR BOOKS
    REGARDS
    NERISHA
    DURBAN
    SOUTH AFRICA

  • 12 - pranav

    Nov 03, 2006 at 11:08 am

    mr banker yo are simply superb in ur writng and imagination skills

  • 13 - shen nalwalla

    May 15, 2007 at 8:47 am

    would like to buy in bombay a copy of byculla boys .where do i find it?

  • 14 - Ashok Banker

    May 17, 2007 at 11:09 pm

    Nerisha, thank you for those kind words. It would have been nicer had you read the books in order, but thanks anyway!

    Pranav, thank you so much. I hope to keep living up to your (high) expectations.

    Shen, Byculla Boy is out of print and will not be republished again anytime in the foreseeable future. Even I don't have a copy of the book.

  • 15 - Suchi Chatterjee

    Aug 03, 2007 at 4:08 pm

    Hello Ashok

    I just purchased a UK copy of one of your books the second part of the Ramayana not realizing it wasn't the real Mccoy, I bought it at a local bookstore in town in Brighton, UK and thought I would try and get the first part on line and that was when I read your review.

    How can I get an Indian copy, the one that you recommend?

    I really want to read it but I want the REAL thing not something that the author is saying isn't the real thing!

    Hope you can help.

    Regards

    Suchi

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