
2 minute read
Aaya re aaya, bookwallah
from 2013-09 Sydney (2)
by Indian Link
The (writers) did not know each other at all at the start of the Indian leg of The Bookwallah journey, but it was evident that they had become the best of friends in the Australian leg of the journey
BY JYOTI sHANk AR

We have all heard about the local sabziwallah, istriwallah, doodhwallah, macchhiwallah, dhobiwallah, kulfiwallah – but a bookwallah? What’s that? And here in Sydney? I have yet to see any kind of wallahs here. Or does the fortnightly home-ice cream-wallah in his van count? My curiosity was piqued and this led me to the State Library of NSW to find out more. And it was such a delight! Four of the bookwallahs out of the original team who toured India were passing through Sydney. They were en route to Brisbane for the Writers Festival, where they spoke on September 8, after having presented their wares at the Melbourne Book Festival in August.
The Bookwallah is a project organised by the Asialink Writing Program of the University of Melbourne. This roving international writers festival ran its tour of India in OctoberNovember 2012, starting at Mumbai and ending their journey at Pondicherry, travelling via Goa, Bangalore and Chennai.
Indian writers like poet Sudeep Sen, novelist and book critic Chandrahas Choudhury and journalist and fiction writer Annie Zaidi, were joined by Australian young-adult fiction author Kirsty Murray and non-fiction writer Benjamin Law, in the 2,000+ km journey. The unique part of this journey was that they travelled by train, lugging over 300 kgs of books across southern India.
The writers are now in Australia doing the same thing, sharing stories and conversations as they traverse the states, in this case from Melbourne to Brisbane by train. Along the way they stop to discuss their books, and the books of their respective countries, meeting readers, sharing ideas with other writers, and whoever else they meet serendipitously on their journeys. Benjamin Law, a Brisbane-based writer is the author of The Family Law (2010) which was shortlisted for Book of the Year at the Australian Book Industry Awards. His first journey into India was when he was researching his second book, Gaysia: Adventures in the Queer East Benjamin travelled to India in 2011, not long after homosexuality was decriminalised in India. Annie Zaidi is the author of Known Turf, a collection of essays, and coauthor of The Bad Boy’s Guide to the Good Indian Girl. She also writes plays and is currently working on
All the writers rued that the global publishing world, dominated by US and UK companies, saw little of the literature of their countries available outside the local arena.
Kirsty Murray has nine novels and numerous works of nonfiction and junior fiction to her name. Her latest novel, The Lilliputians (released in Australia as India Dark), is based on the true story of a theatrical troupe of Australian children that toured India in 1910. The real children were members of Pollard’s Lilliputian Opera Company, a famous Australian theatre company. In the book they are recreated as Perceval’s Lilliputian Opera Company, and research for this book took Kirsty to India where she followed the train route the children took. So she was delighted when invited to be part of the Bookwallahs
Chandrahas Choudhury is a novelist and literary critic based in Delhi and the author of the novel Arzee the Dwarf. He is also editor of an introduction to Indian fiction, India: A Traveller’s Literary Companion, and reviews books for The New York Times, The Washington Post and The Wall Street Journal. He spoke about the richness of the multilingual literature of India and which is in fact so rich, that no one has a sense of the whole. New discoveries are made from translations all the time. Being part of this travelling roadshow with The Bookwallahs gave him the opportunity to not only take his own work around, but also the traditions of hundreds of years