| Writer-reviewer Neel Mukherjee, the joint winner of the     Vodafone-Crossword Books Award 2008 along with novelist Amitav Ghosh, feels     that writings on alternative sexuality are gradually coming out of the     closet in India. 'I would like to believe it (writing freely about alternative sexuality)     is a trend in India. The English-educated urban centres are seeing     liberalism. It's a good thing. I consciously wanted to have a gay     protagonist in my novel,' Mukherjee told IANS on phone from Mumbai.  His book 'Past Continuous' -- the saga of a lonely young gay man who     flees a miserable life in Kolkata to the freedom of Britain -- won the     Vodafone-Crossword award in the best English fiction category along with     Ghosh's 'Sea of Poppies' Thursday.  The London-based author, who has made Britain his home for the last 17     years, feels that a lot has been written about alternative sexuality in     India, but society is still not comfortable with such relationships.  'Gay activist Salim Kidwai has written an important book ('Same Sex Love     in India'), though it is not fiction. Penguin has published its anthologies     of gay and lesbian writings and publishers like Kali and Zubaan will soon     take the lead in lesbian writing. A lot of things are going on in India     about rights, equality and Article 377, which was so long in the     background.  'But personally, England kind of liberated me into writing so openly     about homosexuality. In India, there is still the cultural air     (conventions) that you breathe,' Mukherjee said.  The 38-year old writer, who has been educated in Kolkata (Jadavpur     University) , Oxford and Cambridge, shot to fame as a fiction reviewer for     The Times, London, and Time Magazine-Asia. He is also a contributing editor     for The Boston Review.  'The fiction reviews keep me going though I have cut down on the     numbers. It is difficult to describe a book in 400 words these days. It     just becomes soundbytes,' says Mukherjee.  His novel is about an orphan called Ritwik Ghosh, who grows up in the     bylanes of south Kolkata amid a crowd of suspicious and nosy relatives.  He escapes to Oxford on a scholarship, but grows up suddenly as he     discovers his true self and chooses to be an illegal gay wanderer on the     streets of London and in its public toilets.  Mukherjee also touches upon issues of illegal immigrants, corporal     punishment and aggressive mother and child bonds -- and brings Ritwik in     contact with a senile old Englishwoman, Anne Cameron, who journeys to India     to delve into the shared colonial legacy of India and Britain.  'I poured my heart into creating Anne Cameron. She has suffered so much     and the character Ritwik has a lot of me in him. I love imagining other     people's lives and stepping into their minds. I wanted a lot of outsiders     and loners in my book -- who are alienated,' said Mukherjee, who also lost     his parents like his protagonist.  Mukherjee started writing the book in 2001 after a course in creative     writing at the University of East Anglia.  'But it took a long time for the book to be published. In 2003-2004,     Shruti Devi of Picador India picked up the book and it was finally released     in January 2008. The book, however, sold quite late last year,' Mukherjee     said.  His British publishers Constable & Robinson will bring out the book     in early 2010 under a new title 'A Life Apart'.  Although the protagonist of his novel is a Bengali from Kolkata,     Mukherjee himself is an unlikely Bengali.  'I don't feel like going back to Kolkata -- it's too crowded. The only     thing I miss are Satyajit Ray's books ('Feluda' and 'Professor Shanku'     series). He was probably one of the greatest writers of our childhood,'     says Mukherjee.  He insists that his only connect with Bengal 'is the proficiency in     Bengali language and its cuisine' but his next novel is also set in     Kolkata.  'I can cook almost all kinds of Bengali food. I think Bengali food is     international,' says the writer, whose hobbies are cooking and reading.  Mukherjee's favourite authors are 'lesser known, like American writers     James Salter, Richard Yates and William Maxwell; Mohammed Hanif of Pakistan     and the Norwegian writer Per Petterson'.  (Madhusree Chatterjee can be contacted at madhu.c@ians.in) | 
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