Wednesday, January 8, 2014

Life is Beautiful*
*conditions apply
I
 used to read Mills & Boon romances around 2 decades back. My male friends used to make fun of me for reading those mushy mushy girly novels and my female friends used to lend me their favourites. In those days everyone used to say that if you read one M & B you need not read the second and if you read the second, you could easily write the third. I know that's easier said than done, and I'm glad Sundari decided to write this one. 
Frankly, I began Sundari Venkataraman’s Double Jeopardy expecting the same run-of-the-mill boy and girl stuff. But I wasn’t ready for what I got. Society has changed, and so has today’s romance novel, of which ‘Double Jeopardy’ is a living example. It weaves a romantic tale of three individuals, Sanya, Arth and Ansh, and their dreams and ambitions in a world where the male is no longer the alpha male and the dreamy-eyed young woman has to grapple with the realities of a city which is quite different from what it was ten years ago.
Arth and Ansh are identical twins with differing personalities. Sanya hates Ansh for his brashness and loves the ever-so-caring Arth. Her feelings keep on growing in her subconscious even after she has to move to London with her parents. Unable to forget Arth even after a long gap of ten years, she returns to Mumbai, confident that Arth will reciprocate her feelings.
Her detestation for Ansh resurfaces the moment she sees him at the airport, but he surprises her with such charm and elan that she wonders if this was the same Ansh who once treated her with contempt. Arth, on the other hand, has become a workaholic and hardly has time for Sanya.
At one stage the story tapers into a typical triangle -- Sanya longs for Arth but is unable to resist Ansh; and Ansh takes full advantage of Arth’s absence to flirt with Sanya.
This debut novel, however, has the reader in for an unexpected twist and it is this twist that gives the novel its usp. As a reader, I could completely identify with Sanya’s motivation to return to Mumbai to find the love of her life. Ansh’s sudden soft corner for Sanya had me perplexed and I longed for Arth to reciprocate Sanya’s affections. The writer has played with the three characters extremely well to make the book a page-turner.
However, I felt that after the suspense is revealed, everyone except Sanya accepts the situation without any resistance. There should have been a storm before the calm, some deeper introspection by the supporting characters as the question here is one of uprooting centuries of a set of beliefs. Especially as there was enough space for the writer to explore more, one is left with a feeling that a lot was left unsaid. It could have made a full-fledged novel instead of a novella.
Sundari’s writing style is more visual than verbose, and I imagined Deepika Padukone as Sanya, and the Ranveer Singh as the twins. I wonder who you prefer to see as those three characters?

***/*****

Double Jeopardy by Sundari Venkatraman



The Blurb

Sanya doesn’t just have trouble, she has double trouble. Twins Arth and Ansh Sharma, are rich, sexy and sinfully handsome – what’s a girl to do?

Sanya last saw the twins when she was ten years old. Now, all grown up, she has come looking for gentle Arth, the twin she has loved ever since she can remember. But instead, she is confronted with fiery Ansh, who is hell-bent on seducing her. And what’s worse, she can’t seem to stop herself from responding to him.

As she chases Arth and is chased by Ansh, Sanya finds herself on a crazy roller coaster ride with no way of getting off. How will she deal with these two very different men in her life? Will she be able to convince one twin that she loves the other?

Meet the author

The Author's Thoughts

Even as a kid, she absolutely loved the ‘lived happily ever after’ syndrome as Sundari grew up reading all the fairy tales she could lay her hands on, Phantom comics, Mandrake comics and the like. It was always about good triumphing over evil and a happy end. Soon, into her teens, she switched her attention from fairy tales to Mills & Boon. While she loved reading both of these, she kept visualising what would have happened if there were similar situations happening in India; to a local hero and heroine. 

Her imagination took flight and she always lived in a rosy cocoon of romance over the years. Then came the writing – a true bolt out of the blue! She could never string two sentences together. While her spoken English had always been excellent – thanks to her Grandpa – she could not write to save her life. She was bad at writing essays in both school and college. Later, when it was time to teach her kids, she could manage everything from Science to Mathematics and History & Geography. 

When it came to writing compositions, her kids found her of no help at all. All this changed suddenly one fine day in the year 2000. She had just quit her job at a school’s office and did not know what to do with her life. She was saturated with simply reading books. That’s when she got home one evening after her walk and took some sheets of paper and began writing. It was like watching a movie that was running in her head – all those years of visualising Indian heroes and heroines needed an outlet and had to be put into words. That’s how her first novel, The Malhotra Bride, took shape. 

While she felt discouraged when publishing did not happen, it was her husband who kept encouraging her not to give up. There was no looking back after that. While publishing took a long time happening, Sundari continued to write novels and then short stories and had them published in her blogs. Her luck turned when Indireads approached her to write for them and Double Jeopardy was born.

You can stalk her @

                 
                      


Blog Tour Schedule

1Jan-11 Jan 2014
(The Blog links will be live as and when the posts come up)

2nd Jan 2014
Adite Banerjie  (Spotlight)
aditebanerjie

3rd Jan 2014
Jaibala Rao (Review/Interview)
My School Of Thought

5th Jan 2014
Sridevi Datta (Review)
THE WRITE JOURNEY

7th Jan 2014
Vishwas Byrappa (Review)
Byrappa's notes

7th Jan 2014
Tales Pensieve (Interview)

7th Jan 2014
Ruchi Vasudeva(Interview)
Ruchi Vasudeva Author's nook

8th Jan 2014
Sonia Rao(Interview)
soniaraowrites

9th Jan 2014
Neelesh Gajanan Inamdar (Review)
From the Heart - Neel

10th Jan 2014
Dola Basu Singh (Spotlight)
Shiuli

10th Jan 2014
Sumeetha Manikandan (Review)
Book Reviews by Sumi

11th Jan 2014
Rubina Ramesh (Review/ Interview)
The Book Club













6 comments:

Rubina Ramesh said...

Wonderful Review Neelesh. Except the actor part being distributed :) Salman defintiely :P But the insight you have put to the story is wonderful. This is one story where you really felt bad after it was over.

From the heart-need said...

Well a BIG thanks to you for two reasons - first for initiating this movement, and second for being the first to post a comment on my blog. The actor part was added just before I uploaded the review. And if anyone reads the book after reading, I'm sure they're going to visualise their own fav actors & actresses. I believe it should help them enjoy the book more. I didn't mention it to Sundari, but I think this one can even have a sequel.

Sundari Venkatraman said...

Hi Neelesh
thank you for that wonderful review. I especially like your feedback. Well, I have thought of a sequel but from an angle I am sure no one can imagine ;)
As for it being a novella, I agree that it should have been much longer. We live and learn. Rubina has been telling that to me from the moment she read it actually.
Just one thing though. Sanya is shocked by the truth because she has just found it. The rest of the characters already know it and that's why I did not bring their reactions into the picture. I had to squeeze the whole thing in that newspaper article. If it had been a novel, I would have definitely gone in flashback and told the whole story.
Will keep this point in mind if I ever decide to convert this book into a full-fledged novel.
It has been a joy the past few days and a few more days into the future of course - interacting with so many bloggers and getting an honest feedback.
Thank you again!

Nilima Mohite said...

Neelesh, you can become an example to men, to take romance novella/novels/stories seriously & not dismiss it as chick-lit.
Nice review. You have summed up the entire story perfectly & given your opinions too.
Substituting hero, heroines as the novel characters, is Sundari's forte too ;)
Deepika & Ranbeer Singh, now you have my imagination on a roll too. Hope to read this one by Sundari soon.

From the heart-need said...

Thanks, NAV. I don't think many men would care to follow me. Basically I love reading, and I disregard any reservation policies as far as books are concerned. Literary, Sci-fi, Romance - if it's a good book, I enjoy reading it.

Adite said...

Great review, Neelesh. Hope you continue to read more romance novels. Who knows some day you might be inspired to write one yourself. ;) Sundari take a bow! :)