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With Jimmy The Terrorist,Omair Ahmad explores the fear and claustrophobia of small town India
Every story has its own destined journey. Omair Ahmad first wrote Jimmy The Terrorist as a short story in 2003. Living in Washington DC,this was his attempt to understand how our recent history of riots and curfews might affect an anonymous young man growing up in North India. Ravi Singh,editor-in-chief of Penguin India,saw the potential of a novella or a novel in it. Prodded by him,a couple of years ago,Ahmad got down to writing a longer story on Jimmy,a young man who stabs a police inspector and is beaten to death in the small imaginary town of Moazzamabad in Uttar Pradesh.
For Ahmad,looking at Jimmys background was a kind of exercise in looking at India itself. Doing the field research for the book was like discovering my own country its history and current affairs, he says. As it is,there are very few books written on Indias modern history,compared to Europe and America. We live in perpetual embarrassment of not knowing enough about India, he says. Ironically,its when Ahmad was studying in America that he realised how little he knows about his country.
An opportunity to rediscover India came when the author was working on a magazines special issue on India after 13 years of Independence. This explains the authors decision to start the story in the 60s,touching upon the lack of jobs and events like the Jabalpur riots. The story culminates amidst the paranoia and fear of the 90s. Jimmy The Terrorists narrative,particularly in the second half of the book,acquires a tone that sounds very close to real life. Ahmad,who has lived in Aligarh and Gorakhpur,confesses to experiencing the claustrophobia of curfew and fear.
With a pronounced flavour of life in eastern UP percolating into his storytelling,the writer says that geography changes narrative. Readers can experience more of this in his next book,Unbelonging,a collection of long short stories set in this part of the country. For those looking beyond India,he is also working on a non-fiction book on Bhutan.
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