About Saborna

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I was born and raised in Calcutta , India , and moved to the U.S. for my undergraduate work in chemistry.  I live in Boston , and teach at the Winsor School.  My short fiction has appeared in New York Stories and Quality Women’s Magazine U.K. and been nominated for a Pushcart Prize.

Recently I wrote a 75,000 word novel, “The Distance Between You and Me”.  I am looking for an enthusiastic agent or publisher who may be interested in this book. 

The events in this novel take place in both an India of social revolution and a North America of immigrant assimilation.  It is about human contradictions and dilemmas, and about characters torn apart by the fast-changing social landscape of two worlds. The narrator, a young Indian woman named Mini, must constantly choose between success and morality, between what she once wanted to be and what she has become.  It is Mini’s intelligence, awareness and strength of character--even more than the decision she must make between two worlds and two men--that set this story apart.  Mini is neither the typical housewife nor the poor uneducated woman that has been the traditional lens in most Indian fiction written in English. She is educated and socially conscious, and her political involvements in India make her a keen observer of North American society, even if they cannot really help her with matters of the human heart.

 

Because she is young, human and a woman, all that Mini really wants at first is to be with Amitav, her classmate and a young man who is deeply involved in revolutionary politics in India.  But Amitav appears indifferent to Mini’s love.  Consumed by the all-powerful force of his political being, he drags Mini into one risky situation after another.  Mini’s biggest test comes when she accompanies Amitav to a remote village in India to participate in a peasant struggle against an oppressive and corrupt political system.  Here, under the moon, Mini and Amitav make love for the first time.   As the protest intensifies, their lives are threatened; and Mini grows more and more apprehensive.  She leaves Amitav to return to the city and her family.  After painful soul-searching, she decides to abandon a suffocating middle-class future in India and consents to an arranged marriage with an engineering graduate student, with whom she moves to Vancouver.  Even as she escapes from Amitav, however, Mini is haunted by his ideas, political beliefs, passion and commitment.  Despite herself, she still sees the world through his eyes. Her husband’s pragmatism, sobriety and professional success only heighten her loneliness and isolation.  Mini returns to India and, without intending to, meets Amitav again, only to realize how different her life has become:  While Amitav continues to struggle against oppression and injustice, she is engaged in trivial, self-indulgent pursuits in Canada.  Though she does not know it yet, before long she will have to choose not only between two continents, two different ideologies, two different ways of life, but between the men she loves.


Location:
United States
Primary occupation:
Teacher
Dream occupation:
Writer
Hometown:
Calcutta, India
Schools attended:
Carmel High School
I like:
many things.
Favorite writers:
Eva Hoffman, Vikram Seth, Rohinton Mistry, Amitav Ghosh, George Eliot
Favorite books:
Suitable Boy, Shadow Lines, Pride and Prejudice
Favorite newspapers:
The Telegraph, Boston Globe, Vancouver Sun
Favorite TV shows:
Scrubs, The Comedy Show, Two and a half men
Gender:
Female
Religion:
None