Tishani Doshi is the author of the new novel Small Days and Nights. Her other books include the novel The Pleasure Seekers, and her work has appeared in a variety of publications, including The Guardian and The New York Times. She lives in Tamil Nadu.
Q:
A review of Small Days and Nights in The Guardian calls it "a shattering study of
disaffection and belonging." What do you think of that description?
A:
I think it’s pretty punchy. I don’t know many writers who set out thinking
they’re going to write a shattering study of anything.
I
think of my novel as rather quiet and claustrophobic, a story that draws you
into a specific landscape and inner world, but I certainly was thinking about
the question of belonging.
Here
in India, as in so many other countries, there’s a real battle being fought
between those who feel they have a certain birthright over a place and those
who are considered outsiders.
So,
on a micro level, I wanted this character of mine, Grace, to be caught in this
battle. Someone who has never felt at home anywhere, who longs to find some
place of comfort, but is reminded that she is always standing just outside the
periphery.
But
I appreciate greatly that someone thought it was a book with a shattering
impact. Sure, I’ll take that.
Q:
You've noted that you considered "A House Without Men" as the book's
title. How was the actual title chosen?
A:
I always have titles before I start a book because it gives me a container in
which to put my words, so it felt really weird to be working for a few years on
this books with a constantly changing title.
I
wanted house, I wanted dogs, I wanted arboretum but nothing really felt right,
and then I was reading James Salter’s A Sport and a Pastime and I came across
this line, “It’s in the little towns that one discovers a country, in the kind
of knowledge that comes from small days and nights—“ and I basically pounced on
it, recognizing that it captured everything the novel was trying to do.
This
sense of the accretion of days and nights, building a life in a small place,
the difficulties of that, and given that this is essentially a book about women
and their lives – this sense of enshrining the small, the domestic, those
traditionally “womanly” spaces – and giving them a larger platform, saying
actually these stories can and should be part of the larger stories we tell
about history and nation because they comprise it.
Q:
How would you describe the relationship between Grace and her sister Lucia?
A:
One of the main themes of the novel is this tussle between freedom and duty. I
wanted Grace to change her life, to do what she thought was morally the right
thing to do, but I also wanted her to struggle with it.
I
wanted to write about how a relationship with a differently-abled sibling will
transform your life, but how it can also cramp it. To explore the mysterious
joy of a sister you never had, but not to be sentimental about the difficulty
of being a sole caregiver.
My
brother was born with Down Syndrome and is autistic and so I was writing from a
place of understanding these things with my own particular prism.
Lucia
is the only unsullied character in the book, and in some sense, it’s impossible
to know her, but we get glimpses of her understanding and capacity to enlarge
our sense of family and love, and Grace (I hope) begins to see that too toward
the end of the book.
Q:
What are you working on now?
A:
I’m working on a new collection of poems and thinking about a memoir about the
body and dance.
Q:
Anything else we should know?
A:
All the stories about all the dogs in my book are true. When I first moved out
to the beach one dog adopted me, then he brought another one, and before you
know it, we had 16!
These
dogs really sit on the periphery between domestic and wild, and I wanted to
write about that relationship and the nature of that kind of animal, in that
kind of space.
There’s
also this brutal element of how people treat stray dogs here in India, and so
sadly, the fate of the dogs in my book are also true to life, but I’m happy to
say that I’ve had a stable population of three for the past four years and they
are thriving.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
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