Asia House Bagri Foundation Literature Festival announces programme

The Asia House Bagri Foundation Literature Festival 2015 has announced its programme. In its ninth year, it is the only UK Festival dedicated to pan-Asian writing and will include talks from some of the most exciting names in literature including British-Chinese author Xinran, Turkey’s bestselling author Elif Shafak, award-winning Indian novelist Anuradha Roy and one of …

A life of crime: how to land an agent… and get published

In 2008 I completed my first crime novel and sent the manuscript to twelve London agencies. I was delighted to receive interest from four and quickly signed with a marque crime-specialist agency where I began a painful journey of re-drafting the novel over the next two years. But unfortunately my agent decided the novel was …

Sci Fi is ready to embrace diversity

If you follow genre fiction at all you’ve probably seen the latest furore around the Hugo awards. If you’ve been reading anything about the whole sad puppy debacle you may well be feeling that science fiction as a genre is not ready or willing to be diverse and to be inclusive and welcoming. That isn’t …

Susmita Bhattacharya

Q. Tell us about your debut novel, The Normal State of Mind? The Normal State of Mind is a story of love and friendship. The story revolves around the friendship between Dipali, a widow and Moushumi, a lesbian, and the issues they face in their lives. It is set in 1990s India, the time around …

Asian writers struggle to shake off cultural stereotypes

Many years ago, DIPNET ran a poll on their website. It asked visitors ‘Is publishing a white, middle class ghetto?’ with the overall majority result always in favour of yes. I remember it well because the poll was on the site for about a year, and nor the site nor the poll ever seemed to …

A Bad Character by Deepti Kapoor

reviewed by Jane Wallace There is more than one bad character in this darkly beautiful novel: the term could equally be applied to the city that forms its backdrop, Delhi, as well as the love interest to which it ostensibly refers. With her mother deceased and her estranged father living in Singapore, twenty-year old Idha is …

Children of the Revolution, by Feroze Dada

On arriving at HeHo, the nearest airport to Inle, we were met by Major who took us straight to their pier and our boat for the journey to the monastery. A sense of calm befell me. I felt I was back where I belonged. The hustle and bustle of Yangon and the trials and tribulations felt a …

Zarqa Nawaz

Zarqa Nawaz has carved a career out of ‘writing the funny.’ She created hit show, Little Mosque on the Prairie, the first of its kind to put Muslims on Canadian TV. Her memoir, Laughing All the Way to the Mosque, published last month, captures the realities and absurdities of life for a practicing Muslim woman …

Radhika Sanghani

It was after a horrific accident that journalist, Radhika Sanghani turned her hand to writing fiction. Sanghani wrote her first book, Virgin, a 21 year old’s mission to lose her virginity  in a month, during her recovery from a coach crash. She was suffering from post traumatic stress and needed to do something positive. ‘I spent a …