(After 12)Men’s fiction rules India
December 3rd, 2010 - 10:56 am ICT by IANSBy Shobit Arya
After 12Indian men are reading and writing for their brethren, and how! Already well-acclaimed across the globe in the genre of literary fiction, Indian men seem to have now taken a fancy to commercial fiction too. Authors like Tuhin Sinha, Ashwin Sanghi and Mukul Deva have dealt with subjects like politics, war stories and historical fiction and are up there on the circuit.
At the same time, fresh voices like Abhay Narayan Sapru, a special forces major with a novel on Kashmir operations, and Hemant Kumar with his evocatively titled book, “Prey By The Ganges”, seem to be the names to watch out for.
The rest of the fiction world is largely a women’s market, especially the UK and Europe. A notable exception is the United States, but then the US is such a huge and evolved market that almost everything works there. An out-and-out women’s book like “Eat, Pray, Love” is as huge a hit as, say, a new John Grisham novel.
Men worldwide seem to prefer non-fiction tomes and have a special affinity for biographies. It’s not as if Indian men don’t - the success of Gurcharan Das’ “The Difficulty of Being Good” or P.V. Rajgopal’s “The British, The Bandits & The Bordermen” has largely been possible because of the male readership. What makes Indian men different though, is a variety of factors, demography being an important one.
A major chunk of Indian male readership is young and hence hasn’t graduated to the meatier non-fiction titles. Also, being culturally rooted and living in a country where everything is in a constant flux influence the reading preferences of the Indian male reader.
A sucker for good plots like his counterparts across the globe, the Indian male reader of commercial fiction has for now to live with one valid criticism about his less than connoisseur taste in language. Equally to be blamed would be the Indian publishing industry which is only too happy to pander averagely written works to him, which he laps up as long as the plot is engaging enough.
That’s where publishers, editors and the newly formed literary agents need to play a more active role. For, if Indian male writers are to leave their mark on the international commercial fiction scenario, just like their more elitist literary fiction writing cousins did, they need to certainly spruce up their language skills.
Who knows, with a more literary and lyrical style, they may also get the women readers hooked to their suspense/mystery/political thrillers!
(03-12-2010-Shobit Arya is the publisher of Wisdom Tree and can be contacted at www.wisdomtreeindia.com and shobit.arya@gmail.com. Some of the books mentioned in the article are published by Wisdom Tree.)
- Confessions of a publisher who never visits Jaipur lit fest (Comment) - Jan 26, 2011
- Books may become multi-dimensional experiences (Letter from Frankfurt) - Oct 12, 2010
- Hidden literary treasures often lie in smaller stalls (Comment) - Feb 24, 2012
- Indian publishers should learn from young authors (Comment) - Oct 13, 2011
- 2012 will be game changer for Indian publishing (Comment) - Dec 22, 2011
- India yet to see French style niche publishing - Feb 28, 2012
- The world is the market for e-book readers (Special) - Nov 29, 2009
- Three publishing vets push English literary fiction in India - Apr 11, 2012
- Remaindered books killing Indian publishing! (Special) - Jan 05, 2010
- Simon & Schuster eyes India's digital reading space - Sep 22, 2011
- India celebrates - and debates - relevance of Charles Dickens - Feb 06, 2012
- Books for India's young adults turn new page - Mar 05, 2011
- Indian languages fest ends - Dec 18, 2011
- History back on shelves with a dash of drama - Apr 05, 2012
- Kindle begins e-book revolution in India - Oct 30, 2009
Tags: 12 men, arya, commercial fiction, constant flux, demography, fiction titles, fiction world, ganges, gurcharan das, indian men, john grisham, john grisham novel, kashmir operations, literary fiction, mukul, narayan, s market, sanghi, sinha, valid criticism