The Year of Just Being There: Dipika Mukherjee looks back at 2016
2016
has been a most brutal, capricious year.
On
January 24th, my eldest brother Amitabha Mukerjee, a marathon swimmer and all-round
sportsman, met with an accident while bicycling in Kanpur. He is Professor of
Computer Science at IIT Kanpur with a luminous intelligence, but the impact severely damaged his brain stem.
I flew from Chicago to be with my family. Amit was airlifted to New Delhi after developing life-threatening
bedsores, he was in a persistent coma, he developed septicemia at All India Institute of
Medical Sciences, the doctors thought his MRI looked like Michael Schumacher's; everyone, including the doctors, said Pray for a miracle.
The
days blurred; we held on to his every breath before releasing our
own. My parents, at 90 and 80 years of age, were terrified that they wouldn’t
live to see him ever open his eyes.
In
March, I had to be in Malaysia to launch an anthology on Malaysian sports
writing titled, “Champion Fellas”. And there, in Kuala Lumpur, I opened this
astonishing email:
Sent: Saturday, March 5, 2016 11:50 PM
Subject: Virginia Prize
Subject: Virginia Prize
Dear Dipika
We are pleased to inform you that your
entry ‘Shambala Junction’ has won this year’s Virginia Prize. There were
around 100 entries from all over the world and the standard of entries was
particularly high.
The judges were unanimous in selecting
your novel which they felt dealt with a serious subject in an imaginative way.
We liked the cast of characters, the humour and the east /west contrast.
I had been
shortlisted and longlisted for prizes before, but this was my first major
WIN, and that too for a novel that I had spent six years writing and trying
to publish. I had parted ways with a literary agent from London in the
process and become good friends with some agents from the US who
had liked this book, but it had been turned down so often that I was stunned to
finally have someone willing to not only publish this book, but also give it a
prize.
Aurora Metro asked me for a few words to include for the announcement at the London Book Fair. This was meant to be a celebratory occasion, but all I could say was that this win was bittersweet, as my brother, who was still in a coma, would have been the most delighted at this win (Amit is also a poet and writer and has translated a wonderful collection of feminist Bengali women’s poetry, titled “The Unsevered Tongue”).
My literary world in 2016 continued to sparkle. In May, my novel Ode To Broken Things (Repeater) had its European launch in Amsterdam, followed by a US launch in Chicago.
Yet for me, this has largely been a year of just being here, trapped in an unreal life, waiting for slow improvements and sudden reversals, my fingers on the pulse of a fickle universe. Amit now opens his eyes and uses his thumb to indicate yes and a forefinger for no, but he is in a vegetative state, unresponsive for long hours. For the last four months, I have been teaching Creative Writing in India and being with my natal family while my husband and two sons are in the US. There is no easy solution to this, there is no end in sight.
Yet for me, this has largely been a year of just being here, trapped in an unreal life, waiting for slow improvements and sudden reversals, my fingers on the pulse of a fickle universe. Amit now opens his eyes and uses his thumb to indicate yes and a forefinger for no, but he is in a vegetative state, unresponsive for long hours. For the last four months, I have been teaching Creative Writing in India and being with my natal family while my husband and two sons are in the US. There is no easy solution to this, there is no end in sight.
I am headed to the Richmond Literary Festival on
Nov 23 for the book launch of Shambala Junction. Frances Spalding, CBE, will
speak on Virginia Woolf; then they will award The Virginia Prize for Fiction to
'Shambala Junction'. This evening will also launch a campaign to erect a statue
of Virginia Woolf in Richmond upon Thames.
The occasion is joyous, and will no
doubt be so. But there is something bigger than this which I am still praying for.
Comments