Raj Kamal Jha, one of the more quiet entries to Indian-English writing, found his first book, The Blue Bedspread, panned by the Indian press but panegyrised by the West. His second, If You Are Afraid Of Heights, has received mixed reviews. The shadow of Marquez in Chronicle of A Death Foretold hovers in the latter - in the author’s voice, in the treatment of chronology, in the unwinding of events. Both books, richly symbolic, often cinematic in technique, are about, as Jha likes to call them, "damaged people". Obviously diffident but often disarmingly frank, Jha in this interview talks of his work and his methods. Excerpts.