“Ever
since I could first write I have been doing so. When I was taught how to write
and read at school, I made up my mind that this was what I love to do best and
this was the world I was going to occupy.” – Anita Desai
Born in
Mussoorie, India on this date in 1937, Desai was half-Indian, half-German by
birth, raised in a Hindi/Bengali culture, and learned to read and write in
English, which ultimately became her “literary” language. The youngest of 4 kids, she was fluent in 5
languages, started writing at age 7, and had her first story published at age
9.
After writing short stories and co-founding a
publishing firm in the 1950s, Desai had the first of her 17 novels, Cry The
Peacock, published in 1963. Her 1984
novel The Village by the Sea won the
Guardian Children’s Fiction Prize – a once-in-a-lifetime book award judged by a
panel of British children's writers.
Three of her other novels have been finalists for prestigious Booker
Prize.
Emerita Professor of Humanities at Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, she also has taught writing at Mount Holyoke, Baruch
and Smith Colleges in the U.S. and is a Fellow of the Royal Society of
Literature in Great Britain. Her
daughter Kiran Desai also is an award-wnning novelist and a winner of the Booker
Prize.
After nearly 8 decades of writing,
Desai said she still enjoys pursuing her chosen craft. “Someone who wants to
write should make an effort to write a little something every day,” she said. “Writing
in this sense is the same as athletes who practice a sport every day to keep
their skills honed.”
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