'Literature here is mostly still written to present the smoothest possible picture and to impress outsiders.'
In fiction, I like Ahmed Ali’s Twilight in Delhi, a very grim but enjoyable book that came close to touching the reality of its times (the early 1940s). Reading it, one also realises that in many ways we are worse off today than people were in those days.
What I’d like to see
Our writers have little integrity--literature here is mostly still written to present the smoothest possible picture and to impress outsiders. Even in the daily media, one sees a pandering to the most privileged sections of society: every day there are accounts of disruption in air traffic--something that affects only those who can afford to fly regularly around--while the majority of citizens can’t even take their children to hospital.
This article originally appeared in Delhi City Limits, January 2008