July 08, 2020
There is a second novel I am thinking
Not directly, but it’s hard to escape the subject of redevelopment if you have
grown up in the city or have family here. About four or five years ago, I
decided to put these characters in Mumbai and the story evolved from there.
There is a second novel I am thinking about, something very different from the
first, but it will be a while before I start writing it. The three protagonists
(Ira, Kartik and Kaiz) and their struggle also developed organically over a
decade. That said, stories can be specific and universal at the same time. I
work at a non-profit research lab that works on Artificial Intelligence
solutions for social good. To some extent, I slid towards engineering and IIT.
But writing about the subject required a fair amount of research. The story
might be a uniquely Mumbai story, but the novel is really about finding your
place in a changing world. I have family members who have been on both sides:
tenants and landlords. The novel is about the three protagonists figuring out
who they are, it’s about middle class society defining and asserting itself in
the 90s. My brother came out to me before Section 377 was scrapped, and for
years I dissuaded him from telling our parents that he was gay.Was Karthik’s
character based on your brother or perhaps influenced by him?You can say that
the character is somewhat based on me but influenced by my brother.This book was
apparently turned down by several publishers before it finally got picked up.
But I chose Stanford very consciously, hoping to follow Vikram Seth’s footsteps
and write my first book while there. For what it’s worth, I sent the same
manuscript to two publishers, and both made me offers. So what compelled you to
study at IIT and then Stanford and get into management after that?I don’t see
those as contradictory choices.You have lived in different cities and moved
homes several times, but you seem to have a strong affinity towards Mumbai, is
that why you choose to base your book here or was it an organic process based on
how your story evolved?Growing up, I lived in four different cities — and one
town, Godhra — but most of my extended family was in Mumbai. One of the reasons
for that, I suspect, is that there’s something about Mumbai’s urbanity that’s
universal. Why do you think that happened? What kind of initial feedback were
you motorcycle
bearing Manufacturers given?The book was turned down by 13 agents. Going
into management consulting was a bit of a mistake though, it didn’t suit my
temperament at all. Also, I wanted to break away from the trend of Indian novels
in English bearing lyrical, poetic names. This was the seed for Kartik’s
character. I simply don’t have that kind of courage, I care too much about what
other people think. The title came much after the line. It’s a different matter
that I wasted my time at Stanford and wrote nothing. When the book was done, I
remember thinking, wait, this is such a small, simple story, why did it take me
almost four years to write it? The truth is that a lot of that time was spent
doing research and letting the facts stew in my head till they began to feel
like lived experience. Not only did he come out to the family, but he also came
out quite publicly on a popular Facebook page. Is it also a reference to the
journey the characters undergo?The phrase appears just once in the novel, in a
passage that refers to the peace after the blasts.You have extensively dealt
with the redevelopment angle and its impact on the residents. It’s not been easy
switching contexts between AI and the world of Milk Teeth for the past month, to
tear my mind away from data and algorithms to talk about literature, cities,
love, and class. There were major problems with the draft I sent to agents. I
spent every summer vacation and winter break there. Much like Kaiz in my novel,
I have been fascinated by Mumbai’s history, its role and form in our
consciousness. I think publishers saw the potential in it and were willing to
place a bet that they could help me fix the parts that were not working. But she
was right (she always is!), this is a Bombay novel: this story, these characters
could not have been located anywhere else, or in another decade. I could not
have done what he did.. I even wrote a paper about the representation of Mumbai
in popular media over the years for a course in college. I am so glad he did not
take my rubbish advice. I loved maths and physics in school, and was also very
good at those subjects.The book is set in a middle-class Mumbai suburb and will
appeal to those who are familiar with the city, but do you think it will have
the same impact on a non Mumbaikar?I hope so! The initial response has been very
positive. Arundhati Roy studied architecture, Vikram Seth economics, and
Amitabha Bagchi is a professor of computer science to this day. Too much of the
tension was buried in the past. Most Indian writers have no formal training in
writing and many have non-literary professions. It was (my publisher) Karthika
who first called it a ‘Bombay novel’ and I pushed back because I thought that
was too narrow. Still, I am the product of my experiences, and this book could
not have been what it is without my years at IIT Bombay and Stanford. It is the
city I know best. One devastating rejection letter stopped short of saying I
should abandon the book. Agents probably did not see the value in investing that
much time and effort in a new writer.You have mentioned that despite your
background in aeronautical engineering, you always wanted to be a writer. I had
the most fun writing his part: the voice in his section is close to my inner
voice, and of all the characters in the book, his personality is closest to
mine. The title conveys a sense of becoming. When it gets overwhelming, I take a
step back and observe how bizarre this situation is and then I feel privileged
that I get to occupy such different worlds. My novel is sharp, contemporary, and
playful, so Milk Teeth was perfect. I am still getting to know the characters.
It was only when I was on draft number four that the words jumped out at me: it
hit me that this was the perfect title. Every rejection letter said that the
writing was very good, but there were many complaints — the most common ones
being that there was too little plot and no international hook. It’s about what
happens when people fail to do that and the ways in which they hurt each
other.Now that your book is out, where do you go from here?I started a new job
soon after I submitted my final draft to my publisher.An aeronautical engineer,
who harboured the dream to write a book and persisted despite rejections from
publishers, Amrita Mahale’s debut novel is a fascinating read into the world of
middle class Mumbai, its people and their lives. Did this come from personal
exposure to such situations as your insight into the subject is pretty deep. And
it might seem hard to imagine now, but there was no redevelopment subplot in
that version.The title Milk Teeth is intriguing and I gather you are referring
to the peace post the Mumbai blasts. It was interesting to distill some of my
own anxieties and dissatisfactions through a male character, to build in some
male entitlement. My own family moved every couple of years, so Bombay (and
later Mumbai) became a fixed point of sorts in my itinerant childhood
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