Episode 118 Notes and Links to SJ Sindu’s Work
On Episode 118 of The Chills at Will Podcast, Pete welcomes SJ Sindu, and the two discuss, among other things, her early days of reading and writing (fan fic!) after immigrating to the States from Sri Lanka, the ways in which the books she read and the writing she did as an adolescent informed her later work, encouraging professors and formative moments and texts read, Tamil and its lyricism, her early writing that came from her thesis, and themes and myth and religious texts connected to her standout novel Blue Skinned Gods.
SJ Sindu, a Tamil diaspora author of two literary novels, two hybrid chapbooks, and a forthcoming graphic novel. Her first novel, Marriage of a Thousand Lies, won the Publishing Triangle Edmund White Award and was a Stonewall Honor Book and a finalist for a Lambda Literary Award. Sindu’s second novel, Blue-Skinned Gods, was published to high praise in November 2021 by Soho Press. A 2013 Lambda Literary Fellow, Sindu teaches at the University of Toronto Scarborough.
SJ Sindu's Website
Buy Blue-Skinned Gods
“Blue-Skinned Gods by SJ Sindu review – a moving tale of the allure of superstition” from The Guardian
Article on "The Blue Fugates of Kentucky"
At about 2:20, Sindu talks about moving to the US from Sri Lanka, and how cable and the library helped her learn English and explore her reading and writing skills
At about 4:30, Sindu talks about moving on to "adult reading" after finding kids lit a bit lacking
At about 5:40, Sindu talks about her fan fiction writing for LiveJournal and the “addiction” and “tunnel vision”
At about 7:00, Sindu discusses the Disney fare that informed her early years
At about 7:55, Pete recounts bad memories associated with The Lion King-ha!
At about 8:30, Sindu responds to Pete’s questions about how her fan fiction writing affected the ways she sees audience and informed her later writing
At about 10:30, Sindu explains the qualities of the Tamil language, especially the beauty that comes in listening to it, its lyricism, etc.
At about 14:05, Pete and Sindu discuss an anticlimactic scene from Blue Skinned Gods that’s successful for this fact
At about 14:45, Sindu discusses connections between the Tamil people and Tamil languages of southern India and Sri Lanka
At about 18:20, Sindu explores connections between fantasy, escape and reading in her childhood and adolescence, including her love of the Cam Jensen Mysteries
At about 21:05, Pete recommends Severance from HBO-you, Gentle Reader-watch it!
At about 21:30, Sindu outlines ways in which she did and did not feel represented in the characters and books she read as a kid
At about 23:40, Sindu describes motivation for tailoring her writing to younger readers, as she and Pete discuss “mirrors” and “windows”
At about 24:30, Sindu shouts out transformational works, like Tanuja Desai Hidier’s
Born Confused and Interpreter of Maladies, that changed the way she saw herself and saw literature
At about 26:45, Sindu details moments in high school and college that put her on the path to becoming a professional writer, including reading The Things They Carried and having the pleasure to have class with Timothy Schaffert
At about 29:30, Sindu gives background on early publications and encouraging professors and high school teachers
At about 31:30, Sindu provides background for Marriage of a Thousand Lies, and talks of encouragement from Jonis Agee
At about 33:20, Sindu ruminates on whether her unique jobs she formerly held may make their way into her writing
At about 34:35, Sindu responds to Pete’s questions about the genesis of Blue Skinned Gods,
At about 38:50, the two discuss various meanings of “blue” and Sindu talks about the balance between the title and the subject matter
At about 40:00, Sindu discusses research that went into the book
At about 41:30, Sindu gives background on the evolution of the blue-skinned gods
At about 43:45, Kalki, the main character of the book, is discussed in terms of his early tests as a budding god, as is Ayya, the conniving father
At about 45:30, Kalki’s “test” with Roopa is described
At about 47:35, Kalki and Lakshman’s relationship, and the connection between Rama and Lakshman in the epics are discussed; Pete makes a comparison between the cousin’s relationship
At about 52:30, the two explore the narrative structure, and Sindu explains her process in writing in different perspectives
At about 57:10, Pete and SJ discuss the importance of the character, Sita, and Kalki’s later “awakening”
At about 1:01:10, Sindu describes how the conniving father from the book came about as an amalgamation of Trump and modern-day religious cults
At about 1:04:40, Pete and Sindu discuss connections between the book and cognitive dissonance in faith and in politics
At about 1:08:20, themes of guilt and fealty and sexual from the book discussed
At about 1:10:28, Pete geeks out about the book’s last line, and Sindu discusses the process of arriving with that last line
At about 1:13:20, Pete reads a few complimentary lines from The Guardian review of her book
At about 1:14:00, Sindu reads from page 238-239 of the book
At about 1:19:50, Sindu critiques the Blue Skinned Gods band
At about 1:20:55, SJ discusses upcoming projects, including Shakti, illustrated by Nabi H. Ali
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Please tune in for Episode 119 with Deesha Philyaw. Her debut short story collection, The Secret Lives of Church Ladies, won the 2021 PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction The Secret Lives of Church Ladies focuses on Black women, sex, and the Black church, and is being adapted for television by HBO Max with Tessa Thompson executive producing. Deesha is also a Kimbilio Fiction Fellow and will be the 2022-2023 John and Renée Grisham Writer-in-Residence at the University of Mississippi.
The episode will air on April 19.
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