Category: Asian Women Writers

Duty and Desire – A Tale of Modern India

Duty and Desire – A Tale of Modern India

What can I tell you about my debut novel, Duty and Desire, the first in my Winds of Fire series, that would intrigue you? It was a 9 year journey to finish Duty and Desire. I began writing the original draft in 2002, shortly after we moved from Singapore to New Jersey, USA. My kids [...]

February 13, 2013 | 3 Comments More
Nurturing a Writers’ Group

Nurturing a Writers’ Group

Writers are fragile. When rejection slips pile up one yearns for reassurance. A decade back I would feel delighted if someone from my family or a close friend volunteered to read my work. But, often after reading they would feel obliged to make some positive remarks or critical comments. These casual reactions are just that: [...]

November 24, 2012 | 8 Comments More
Fitting in a Genre

Fitting in a Genre

Shortly after completing the original draft of Duty and Desire, I learned that all novels had to fit in a genre. Multicultural was the in-word at the time and it appeared to “fit” my work. But when I asked myself if my characters were multicultural, the answer was no. They were characters whose opinions, values, beliefs, [...]

August 7, 2012 | 37 Comments More
Why Multi-Genre Writing Rocks!

Why Multi-Genre Writing Rocks!

During the week of June 14-17, I was fortunate enough to win a scholarship to attend the Wesleyan Writers’ Conference. It is a program that offers the opportunity for people to meet fellow writers and learn from some of the best in the field, and I was ecstatic. But a dear friend, who is privy [...]

July 6, 2012 | 9 Comments More
Italian Author Elena Doni: Writing Fakhra Younas’ Life Story

Italian Author Elena Doni: Writing Fakhra Younas’ Life Story

Backstory. The memoir, “Il volto cancellato” by Fakhra Younas with Elena Doni, is the story of a Pakistani woman who started life in Karachi’s red light district, became famous as a dancer and movie star, and then was unspeakably disfigured by an acid attack. Fakhra married her “prince”, the son of the former governor of Pakistan’s [...]

June 1, 2012 | 4 Comments More
Harnessing The Muse – How To Stay Inspired

Harnessing The Muse – How To Stay Inspired

Art is anything and everything that stirs the emotions. To create art requires an understanding of emotion; a clear sense of how lived experience impacts and expresses our inner world. We writers, like every other type of artist, gain inspiration from the world around us and from our own experiences. A lot of people believe [...]

May 24, 2012 | 7 Comments More
Discipline of Writing. Writing as a Discipline.

Discipline of Writing. Writing as a Discipline.

First, there is the discipline of writing. Writers have long touted the value of the discipline of writing. While the strategies and goals to accomplish this task vary, the primary advice is relatively consistent – write everyday. Some say its best to write for a fixed length of time, while others insist on a daily [...]

April 4, 2012 | 8 Comments More
When the Story Hurts too Much: Fakhra Younas’ Life and Memoir

When the Story Hurts too Much: Fakhra Younas’ Life and Memoir

When a woman tells her story, writes her memoir, she is writing her own history. She becomes visible to history; part of the human narrative. Telling her truth, her experience and wisdom, she leaves her legacy. When the life lived hurts too much… it’s hard to write, and hard to tell. And when the story told [...]

March 27, 2012 | 41 Comments More
Memoir: Agony and Relief

Memoir: Agony and Relief

Narrating stories is as old as history itself. In writing about my childhood growing up in India, it’s mostly pain that I highlight: writing allows us to search the depths of our being – to excavate, sort, pile, discard, and heal. Writing a personal narrative comes with mixed emotions, an eclectic blend of agony and relief [...]

June 8, 2011 | 19 Comments More
Asian Women Writers

Asian Women Writers

Asia – what is Asia? Is it meaningful in any other way than a general geographic location? Asia is made up of so many diverse languages, cultures and peoples. So diverse. Indians have such a rich culture and history. Chinese are very different. Tibetans are yet different. And then there are those people who are [...]

May 3, 2011 | 0 Comments More