Kishwar Desai
Kishwar Desai | |
---|---|
Born | Kishwar Rosha 1 December 1956 |
Alma mater | Lady Shri Ram College |
Occupation | Author |
Spouse | Lord Desai |
Website | www |
Kishwar Desai (née Rosha) (born 1 December 1956) is an Indian author and columnist. Her first novel, Witness the Night, won the Costa Book Award in 2010 for Best First Novel and has been translated into over 25 languages. It was also shortlisted for the Author's Club First Novel Award and longlisted for the Man Asian Literary Prize.[1][2] Her novel Origins of Love, published in June 2012, was critically acclaimed.[3][4][5] The Sea of Innocence, published in 2014 in India as well as in the UK and Australia, was widely discussed as it dealt with the issue of gang rape. Desai also has a biography, Darlingji: The True Love Story of Nargis and Sunil Dutt, to her credit.[6] She wrote her latest book in 2020, released on 28 December, titled, The Longest Kiss.
Early life and education
[edit]Born Kishwar Rosha on 1 December 1956 in Ambala, Punjab (now Haryana) to Padam and Rajini Rosha.[citation needed] She grew up in Chandigarh, where her father was the head of Punjab Police, and graduated from Lady Shri Ram College in 1977, in Economics (Hons).[citation needed]
Career
[edit]She started her career as a print journalist and worked as a political reporter with the Indian Express moving on to television and broadcast media after a while, where she worked for over two decades. She worked as anchor, TV producer and head of a TV channel with some of the major Indian television networks. She was also the Vice President at Zee Telefilms (Zee TV). She anchored Doordarshan's morning show, Good Morning Today, after which she took over as the CEO of Tara Punjabi TV channel, a part of Broadcast Worldwide, which was established by former STAR TV head, Rathikant Basu. Thereafter Desai moved to Zee and NDTV, where she worked as a producer.[citation needed]
She has written for The Guardian[7] and currently writes columns for The Week magazine, The Asian Age and The Tribune newspapers.[citation needed]
Literary career
[edit]Her award-winning novel Witness the Night, was the first in the series featuring the feisty Indian middle-aged social worker-cum-crime investigator, Simran Singh. In a small town in the heart of India, a young girl, barely alive, is found in a sprawling house where thirteen people lie dead. The girl is charged with the murders and Simran is now her only hope. The judges of the Costa Award (Anita Rani, Anneka Rice and Mark Thornton)[8] said "Kishwar Desai pulls off a remarkable trick, transplanting a country-house murder to modern-day India in a book that's not afraid to tackle serious themes". Witness the Night was also shortlisted for the Author's Club First Novel Award and longlisted for the 2009 Man Asian Literary Prize. In 2020, The Independent's Emma Lee-Potter listed it as one of the 12 best Indian novels, calling it a "stunning debut".[9]
In Origins of Love,[10] Desai took a close look at surrogacy and adoption. Simran Singh is asked to examine the case of an abandoned baby at an IVF clinic and what follows is a maze of new age fertility rites, and surrogacy. The book received critical acclaim in UK, Australia and India.[citation needed] In her latest novel, The Sea of Innocence, Simran Singh is trying to find a British girl Liza Kay who has gone missing from the beaches of Goa. It was published in India, UK and Australia and received rave reviews. The Sea of Innocence had a reflection of the Nirbhaya gang-rape case in December 2012 in Delhi.[citation needed]
Desai's third novel in the series is The Sea of Innocence.[11]
Desai's novels have been translated into many different languages, including Chinese, Spanish, French, etc.[citation needed]
Prior to writing fiction, Desai wrote a probing yet affectionate biography of Nargis and Sunil Dutt, two iconic Indian film stars, in Darlingji: The True Love Story of Nargis and Sunil Dutt. The book based on interviews with the Dutt family and friends, explored their lives in detail and tells the larger story of the evolution of Hindi cinema, and of a society and a nation in the throes of change. Desai has also written a play, Manto!, based on the life of the famous Urdu writer, Saadat Hasan Manto, which won the TAG Omega Award[12] for Best Play in 1999. Desai is now working on taking the Partition Museum forward and on a new book on Indian cinema. Desai also released a book in 2020, called The Longest Kiss which is the story of Bombay Talkies founder and actress Devika Rani.[13] [14]
Personal life
[edit]After her first marriage, she changed her name to Kishwar Ahluwalia[15] and has a son, Gaurav and a daughter, Malika from the marriage. On 20 July 2004, after a divorce, she married[16][17] economist Meghnad Desai,[18] a member of the British House of Lords. She lives between London, Delhi and Goa.[citation needed]
She is a Trustee with the Gandhi Statue Memorial Trust, in which she helped to set up the statue of Mahatma Gandhi at Westminster Square in London. While the government allotted the space, the charity, chaired by Lord Meghnad Desai, had to raise the money for it. The statue was inaugurated by the then Prime Minister David Cameron and the Finance Minister of India, Arun Jaitley, in 2015. Later in 2015, Prime Minister Narendra Modi also paid his respects at the Gandhi Statue on his visit to the UK, accompanied by the members of the Gandhi Statue Memorial Trust and Prime Minister Cameron.[citation needed]
Works
[edit]- The Longest Kiss: The Life and Times of Devika Rani. Westland, 2020. ISBN 9789389152470
- The Sea of Innocence. Simon & Schuster Limited, 2013. ISBN 9781471101427
- Origins of Love. Simon & Schuster Limited, 2013. ISBN 9781471111228
- Witness the Night, 2009; Simon & Schuster UK, 2012. ISBN 9781471101526
- Darlingji: The True Love Story of Nargis and Sunil Dutt. HarperCollins India, 2007. ISBN 9788172236977
References
[edit]- ^ "No Girlhoods" Archived 31 January 2013 at archive.today. Outlook India. 5 January 2011. Retrieved 2012-07-28.
- ^ "Two books on India in UK literary award shortlist". The Times of India. 18 November 2010. Retrieved 2012-07-28.[1]
- ^ "No Girlhoods". Outlook India. 5 January 2011. Retrieved 2012-07-28.
- ^ "Origins of Love". The Independent. 15 July 2012. Retrieved 2012-07-28
- ^ "Origins of Love". ABC Radio National. 11 July 2012. Retrieved 2012-07-28.
- ^ "The Queen and the Commoner". India Today. 25 October 2007. Retrieved 2012-07-28.
- ^ "Kishwar Desai | The Guardian". www.theguardian.com. Retrieved 8 July 2024.
- ^ "Costa Books Awards 2010". The Telegraph. 5 January 2011. Retrieved 2012-07-28.
- ^ Lee-Potter, Emma (5 August 2020). "12 best Indian novels that everyone needs to read". The Independent. Retrieved 23 December 2020.
- ^ Mehta, A., Saraswat, S., & Paul, M. F. (2022). A critique of baby making supermarts: Surrogacy clinics in Kishwar Desai’s Origins of Love (2012). Research Journal in Advanced Humanities, 3(4), 115-128. https://doi.org/10.58256/rjah.v4i1.958
- ^ Mars-Jones, Adam (29 June 2013). "The Sea of Innocence by Kishwar Desai – review". The Observer. Retrieved 8 July 2024.
- ^ "Sponsors beg off, it's curtains for theatre". The Indian Express. 11 June 1999.
- ^ "'The Longest Kiss' sheds light on Devika Rani's life kept away from world". Malayala Manorama. 22 December 2020.
- ^ "Kishwar Desai chronicles the charmed life of Devika Rani".
- ^ "People: Kishwar Ahluwalia Profile". Business Today. 22 June 2000.
- ^ "Made for Each other". The Tribune. 8 August 2009.
- ^ "Lord Meghnad weds his lady love". The Times of India. 20 July 2004.
- ^ "Desai unravels economics of Pound: Khushwant Singh". The Tribune. 13 May 2006.
External links
[edit]- Indian women novelists
- 1956 births
- Living people
- People from Ambala
- Delhi University alumni
- English-language writers from India
- Indian columnists
- Indian women journalists
- Indian television executives
- 20th-century Indian biographers
- Indian women television presenters
- Indian television presenters
- People from Chandigarh
- Indian women television producers
- Indian television producers
- Novelists from Haryana
- 21st-century Indian novelists
- 21st-century Indian women writers
- 21st-century Indian writers
- 20th-century Indian journalists
- Indian women non-fiction writers
- Indian women biographers
- Indian women columnists
- 20th-century Indian women writers
- Women writers from Haryana
- Spouses of life peers
- British baronesses
- Journalists from Haryana