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For the October 2016 Muse of the Month, we take inspiration from Anuja Chauhan. The 5 best entries will be published.
Step 1. Read the writing cue (which is either a direct quote from the featured author, or a quote from one of their works, mentioned down below) and get inspired.
Step 2. Write your own story/poem/narrative/essay/piece based on the cue. You could use it as the opening line, the closing sentence, or somewhere in between! You could even choose not to use it anywhere in your story – just write a story using the cue as a prompt. (And the ‘story’ can be fictional – or not – as you wish).
Step 3. Send your work to us. Please email it to [email protected] with ‘Muse of the month – October 2016’ in the subject line, and your story as a word/txt attachment. Do include the name we should use if we publish it, and a brief introduction of yourself (2-3 lines) in the mail.
Please note: Given the number of entries received, we won’t be able to respond to each, but every single entry is being read through very carefully and is much appreciated.
Please send in your stories by Tuesday, 18th October, by 3 p.m. IST. The 5 best stories will be published on Women’s Web between 24th Oct to 28th October, one on each day.
The material should be previously unpublished elsewhere. (Copyright stays with you and you’re free to subsequently publish it elsewhere).
Keep it between 250 and 2000 words. (Please keep this in mind; in past editions, we have had to disqualify some good entries purely due to word count issues).
Please avoid typing the story as inline text. Send it as an attachment only.
The 5 best entries will each win a Flipkart voucher worth Rs 250. Plus, there will be 10 overall winners at the end of 2016 from among these winners!
Anuja Chauhan is an author and advertiser, and is often called the best writer of the commercial fiction genre. She worked in advertising for almost two decades before quitting her job as a vice-president of JWT (J. Walter Thompson) to take up full time writing. 17 years of advertising made her realise her true love of writing. As she says, “Advertising is like writing in a very tight box. I had begun to tire of it.”
Born in an army family, she grew up in various cantonments, finally doing her post graduation from Australia. As a teenager she would concoct stories to entertain her friends. She is often referred to as the literary pop-star owing to her elegantly spicy and witty urban slang, use of hinglish, and a humorous take on the absurdities of Indian life. Her male characters are delectable and female characters are strong women, because she likes girls to have strength of character…those who have a larger life plan with a perpetually thinking brain.
Her first two books, The Zoya Factor (2008) and The Battle For Bittora (2010) happened during her full time job. With her third book Those Pricey Thakur Girls (2013) being converted to a television serial, she has taken up screen writing as well. Her latest offering The House That BJ Built is a sequel, which again revolves around the Thakur girls and family drama.
With a love for big houses that shows in her stories too, she stays with her husband, who is a television producer, and their three kids in Bangalore, and hopes her house is the place where her grandchildren would come and visit.
“If I had low self-esteem, how could I have done what I did tonight?” – Anuja Chauhan, Those Pricey Thakur Girls
Do not forget to send in your entries by Tuesday, 18th of October, 3 p.m. IST.
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Neena was the sole caregiver of Amma and though one would think that Amma was dependent on her, Neena felt otherwise.
Neena inhaled the aroma that emanated from the pan and took a deep breath. The aroma of cumin interspersed with butter transported her back to the modest kitchen in her native village. She could picture her father standing in the kitchen wearing his white crisp kurta as he made delectable concoctions for his only daughter.
Neena grew up in a home where both her parents worked together in tandem to keep the house up and running. She had a blissful childhood in her modest two-room house. The house was small but every nook and cranny gave her memories of a lifetime. Neena’s young heart imagined that her life would follow the same cheerful course. But how wrong she was!
When she was sixteen, the catastrophic clutches of destiny snatched away her parents. They passed away in a road accident and Neena was devastated. Relatives thronged her now gloomy house and soon it was decided that she should be married off.
Being a writer, Nivedita Louis recognises the struggles of a first-time woman writer and helps many articulate their voice with development, content edits as a publisher.
“I usually write during night”, says author Nivedita Louis during our conversation. Chuckling she continues,” It’s easier then to focus solely on writing. Nivedita Louis is a writer, with varied interests and one of the founders of Her Stories, a feminist publishing house, based in Chennai.
In a candid conversation she shared her journey from small-town Tamil Nadu to becoming a history buff, an award-winning author and now a publisher.
Nivedita was born and raised in a small town in Tamil Nadu. It was for schooling that she first arrived in Chennai. Then known as Madras, she recalls being awed by the city. Her love-story with the city, its people and thus began which continues till date. She credits her perseverance and passion to make a difference to her days as a vocational student among the elite sections of Madras.
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