<p>The book is a nostalgic tale of love and karmic destiny set amid the picturesque green slopes and the colourful ethnic culture of her native Coorg in Karnataka.<br /><br />"Five years ago, when I began to write the novel, I knew it had to be Coorg. I was madly in love with the place where I spent several childhood years. The birth of the book was organic," Mandanna told IANS in an interview here.<br /><br />"The scenes were inside my head for a long time. The characters would crop up and render the story a life of its own. I felt that I was just a medium telling a tale."<br /><br />"Tiger Hills" was released in the capital Monday. Set in Coorg in 1878, it is the story of a little girl, Devi, who vows to marry the great tiger hunter Machu.<br /><br />She befriends Devanna, a young boy whose mother has died in tragic circumstances; and they become inseparable. But their destinies change when Devi meets Machu, the tiger hunter of great repute and a man of immense honour and pride. The catastrophic consequences of the triangular romance affect generations to come.<br /><br />Mandanna, an investment banker from IIM-Bangalore and Wharton Business School, had begun her career as a writer of "short stories to de-stress from the rigours of her work".<br /><br />The task to connect to a different historical period in the din of New York was mammoth for Mandanna, when she decided to write a novel.<br /><br />But the New York Public Library, where "she accomplished the bulk of her research by jotting copious notes from 19th century botany books detailing the bio-fauna of the region - and old back issues of the Gazetteer of Mysore to backdrop her story", helped her overcome the time lag.<br /><br />"I collected reams of information, mostly throwaway snippets that I inserted in my book. The more you graft on to your canvas, the more you understand how that period of life looked or felt," she said.<br /><br />Hunting is integral to the Coorgi way of life, Mandanna said, recollecting the "genesis of tiger hunter Machu's character".<br /><br />"Almost every Coorgi household has old sepia photographs of men in their hunting gear and shotguns. Coorg has a long hunting tradition because the race is martial. Men still turn up in their traditional black tunics with golden sash and a dagger tied around their waists at Coorgi weddings," Mandanna said.<br /><br />Mandanna spoke to "several hunters, mostly older members of the community," who told "her how it happened". "Hunting was primarily a recreation," she said.<br /><br />Another source of information for the period backdrop was Coorgi folk songs. "I read between the lines of the Coorgi folk songs. In the book, I wrote about a tiger song that was sung to the accompaniment of kettledrums. The drums were beaten to flush the game from its hideout. A wonderful anthology of Coorgi folk songs, 'Pattola Palame', translated in English, was my source of information," she said.<br /><br />Recreating the period was a "process of imagination and isolation".<br /><br />"The more I read about it, the easier it is to visualise the period. I turned my back on the modern world. I sat in front of my laptop for six hours before I could re-connect and allow the story to flow. Each time the phone rang, I lost the connection," Mandanna said.<br /><br />The novelist, who grew up reading English classics and R.K. Narayan, observed that "translations of vernacular literature were enriching contemporary Indian writing in English".<br /><br />"We have more access to regional literature now. I want to read the English translation of Chowringhee by Mani Sankar Mukherjee," Mandanna said. <br /><br />"Tiger Hills" has been published by Penguin-India.<br /><br />The book was published by Orion in Britain. In January this year, the Daily Express, Britain, wrote: "This book is a staggering achievement, especially as it's a first novel ... Sarita is a major new talent."<br /><br />The UK Telegraph said it was "one of the debut novels to watch out for in 2010".</p>
<p>The book is a nostalgic tale of love and karmic destiny set amid the picturesque green slopes and the colourful ethnic culture of her native Coorg in Karnataka.<br /><br />"Five years ago, when I began to write the novel, I knew it had to be Coorg. I was madly in love with the place where I spent several childhood years. The birth of the book was organic," Mandanna told IANS in an interview here.<br /><br />"The scenes were inside my head for a long time. The characters would crop up and render the story a life of its own. I felt that I was just a medium telling a tale."<br /><br />"Tiger Hills" was released in the capital Monday. Set in Coorg in 1878, it is the story of a little girl, Devi, who vows to marry the great tiger hunter Machu.<br /><br />She befriends Devanna, a young boy whose mother has died in tragic circumstances; and they become inseparable. But their destinies change when Devi meets Machu, the tiger hunter of great repute and a man of immense honour and pride. The catastrophic consequences of the triangular romance affect generations to come.<br /><br />Mandanna, an investment banker from IIM-Bangalore and Wharton Business School, had begun her career as a writer of "short stories to de-stress from the rigours of her work".<br /><br />The task to connect to a different historical period in the din of New York was mammoth for Mandanna, when she decided to write a novel.<br /><br />But the New York Public Library, where "she accomplished the bulk of her research by jotting copious notes from 19th century botany books detailing the bio-fauna of the region - and old back issues of the Gazetteer of Mysore to backdrop her story", helped her overcome the time lag.<br /><br />"I collected reams of information, mostly throwaway snippets that I inserted in my book. The more you graft on to your canvas, the more you understand how that period of life looked or felt," she said.<br /><br />Hunting is integral to the Coorgi way of life, Mandanna said, recollecting the "genesis of tiger hunter Machu's character".<br /><br />"Almost every Coorgi household has old sepia photographs of men in their hunting gear and shotguns. Coorg has a long hunting tradition because the race is martial. Men still turn up in their traditional black tunics with golden sash and a dagger tied around their waists at Coorgi weddings," Mandanna said.<br /><br />Mandanna spoke to "several hunters, mostly older members of the community," who told "her how it happened". "Hunting was primarily a recreation," she said.<br /><br />Another source of information for the period backdrop was Coorgi folk songs. "I read between the lines of the Coorgi folk songs. In the book, I wrote about a tiger song that was sung to the accompaniment of kettledrums. The drums were beaten to flush the game from its hideout. A wonderful anthology of Coorgi folk songs, 'Pattola Palame', translated in English, was my source of information," she said.<br /><br />Recreating the period was a "process of imagination and isolation".<br /><br />"The more I read about it, the easier it is to visualise the period. I turned my back on the modern world. I sat in front of my laptop for six hours before I could re-connect and allow the story to flow. Each time the phone rang, I lost the connection," Mandanna said.<br /><br />The novelist, who grew up reading English classics and R.K. Narayan, observed that "translations of vernacular literature were enriching contemporary Indian writing in English".<br /><br />"We have more access to regional literature now. I want to read the English translation of Chowringhee by Mani Sankar Mukherjee," Mandanna said. <br /><br />"Tiger Hills" has been published by Penguin-India.<br /><br />The book was published by Orion in Britain. In January this year, the Daily Express, Britain, wrote: "This book is a staggering achievement, especially as it's a first novel ... Sarita is a major new talent."<br /><br />The UK Telegraph said it was "one of the debut novels to watch out for in 2010".</p>