Switzerland Book Launches, Nov 06
Nov 15th
Journalist vs. Author: teenage Writer at Frankfurt Book Fair 06
Oct 11th
3 – 8 October 2006: Jyoti Guptara attended the world’s largest Book Fair at Frankfurt as an author with Indian publisher Tara Press and as a journalist with The International Indian magazine.
Despite over 7,000 exhibitors at the Frankfurt Book Fair 2006 and my lack of a map, my feet lead me directly to the collective stand of my Indian publisher and its relevant imprint. The same instinct that directed me here tells me that these four Indians are my publishers and agents even before I catch sight of the lettering: India Research Press / Tara Press – and Red Ink, the first, and to my knowledge only, Indian literary agency.
We meet for the first time after months of electronic correspondence. I immediately feel at home with them; it’s as if we already know each other, and just happen not to know much about one another. It’s always been business.
“All Delhi’s turned up,” they laugh. Indeed, a glance at the area between Halls 5.0 and 6.0 yields more brown faces than white. It is the 3rd of October and publishers are setting up their stands, arranging their products, books and promotionals. India is the Guest of Honour this year. I hear more Hindi than German.
After weeks of being chained to a computer and editing, it is refreshing to be meeting people and talking. After six years of working on a book you know may never be published, which was the case until recently, receiving overwhelmingly positive responses from international publishers, literary agents and scouts is like having your batteries recharged. More >
Accepted for Publication!
Apr 25th
Good news: I woke up at 08.00 this morning!
But the story doesn’t end there. I woke up because my father woke me for exercise (although he did not wake me for exercise).
It gets better still; before I could be motivated to get out of bed and begin the violent process of circulating blood around my body, a rush of blood to the head was inspired by a phone call. My father said it would be for me in his typical manner, but it was eight o’clock – all my friends would be at school. However, it did turn out to be for me. Debbie Smith from Tara Press, Bahrisons, India.
They liked our book, and they had given it to a Reader, who had read it cold (without any information about the authors, including our age). The Reader had liked it very much, and so had the other people in the publishing house. Basically, they want to publish us!
Very exciting! Very, very cool!
But … not as much as you would have thought, considering we’ve been waiting for publication for 5 years already. As Dan Gilbert says: we consistently overestimate the emotional impacts of events. Precisely because we’ve been looking forward to acceptance for so long, with such ecstasy, reaching the goal loses some of its magic. It’s more of a relief than anything else. But that made the journey all the more interesting.
As we were to discover, this is anything but the end. This is the beginning.
First Calaspia Sale: to Indian Publisher, March 2006
Mar 29th
Rights into territories in South and South-East Asia to epic fantasy Conspiracy of Calaspia sold to Tara Press, fiction imprint of India Research Press, for publication in November 2006, while the Guptara Twins are still 17 years old.
Jyoti’s visit to Frankfurt Book Fair 2004
Oct 10th
8th October 2004
On Friday the eighth of October, I was sitting on my father & mother’s bed talking with them about our book and publishers. I mentioned the Frankfurt Book fair, and my father told me a little about it. My brother had suggested that it would be better to go once I was already published, and not go to seek out publishers. My father said that actually it could be a good way of getting questions answered and receiving advice.
‘It’s on now, though,’ I said, ’apparently.’
‘Why don’t you run upstairs and find out then?’ said my father. ‘Quickly do an internet search. If it is on at present, then we’ll have to act fast. We need a synopsis, and some copies of the manuscript.’ More >
Jyoti Leaves School to be Full-time Writer, July ‘04
Jul 29th
With only a handful of articles and short stories published and no book publisher in sight, Jyoti Guptara leaves Switzerland’s prestigious “Kantonsschule / Gymnasium” to study by himself at home and to write, becoming one of the world’s youngest full-time writers. Meanwhile, Suresh does brilliantly at Bradfield College boarding school in the UK.
Jyoti Guptara Published in The Wall Street Journal, June 2004
Jun 25th
Jyoti’s article on the casting for Harry Potter’s Viktor Krum in Bulgaria is published in The Wall Street Journal. Editors say that he, a 15-year-old, is possibly the youngest person the Journal has ever published. See Pic | Read the Article
