Dear Kaavya,
This is your Akka writing. The fact that you have never met me is immaterial; we are brown and we dont live in the land our parents were born inthat alone means that you probably have relatives youve never met, just like I do, so Akka it easily is.
Paavum Kaavya (lets call you PK for short), there is something I want you to know, but before I disclose that, I have to admit a fault of which I am rather ashamed, a fault which I hope youll forgive your imperfect Akka for.
I was jealous of you.
Just a bissel, but it was enough to make me loathe myself for a few minutes. Green looks fabulous on me, but envy surely does not flatter. Wait, dont frownI promise that once I was aware that I was being a twat, I earnestly called myself out on it and owned my jealousy. Long before I admitted that my unlikely-fantasy-if-wishes-came-true job was acting, I cherished what to me seemed an even more far-fetched aspiration: to write. Getting a book deal seemed like the greatest thing which could possibly happen to someone. To get paid to write? Wow. And that you did, with a stunning advance, which everyone bandies about ad nauseum, since it makes your fall all the more violent.
Sigh. How I wished that my parents had been savvy enough to enroll me in an Ivy-League-Prep-Camp-Thing. Where my counselor, who just happened to be a published author, would discover me as if I were some naïve starlet in a 40s era soda shop and then pluck me out of the sweaty, freaked-out ranks of cloned overachievers and marvel at my genuine uniqueness. My parents made me turn down Columbia for U.C. Davis. My parents are SO not your parents. Your parents gave you everything, including an inadvertent star-making opp that made me want to howl. Youre nearly half my age. Its like watching your little sister get married before you do. Its a little humiliating to endure, in this obsessed with chronological-milestones culture we share.
So, whenever this group blog of mine did a post about you, Id look down and notice that my skin suddenly looked wayyy more olive than usual. Then Id take a deep breath and tell myself that you deserved it. That you had hustled for it, working on your writing when in comparison, 17-year old me probably wouldve been brooding over which Smiths or Ultravox LP to spin next. My skin would go back to the shade my mother calls irrantharam and Id exhale with relief. It felt good to be silently proud of you.
Heres the thing my little PK: I still am. And Im a little appalled at how many people are crowing elatedly about your alleged toppling. The first thing I thought of when I read the Crimson writing on the blog was that tragically accurate, snarktastic story about the pet shop with international crabs. Youre looking at me blankly. Im sure you havent slept. Tut-tut. That wont do. You know brown girls are predisposed to developing those nasty under eye circles. Take a benadryl, bachi. Your skin and, well, everything will thank you. Hell, take a nap right now. Ill dispel your probably non-existent curiosity about crabs for you, like a wee bedtime story.
So, there was this pet store and it was renowned for carrying the most exhaustive selection of crabs around there were specimens from Mexico, Japan, Russia almost everywhere, really. Each tank had a very secure looking cover to hold in the precious crab-cargo. All, but one, that is. Perplexed, a customer pointed to the open cage and asked the pet store proprietor why it didnt have a lid.
Oh. Those are the crabs from India. A lid isnt required, because as soon as one of them climbs up, all of the others furiously yank it back down. So they never get out.
Look at you, almost asleep. And I havent even come to my main point yet! No wonder you got the book deal and I didnt. We hadnt met, so I have no way of knowing if we have this in common, but something tells me we just mightyou see, I have a near photographic memory for all things useless. Didnt help me with German vocab, but it does help me recall conversations Ive had almost flawlessly, even if its been some time since the words were originally spoken (as you can imagine, this makes me a terrifying girlfriend, since its exceptionally easy to destroy my boyfriends in arguments but we wont go there, in case your parents are reading. Wha-? OH. Hi Viswanathan Uncle and Auntie! I promise Im a virgin whos never conversed with men, even ones Im related toIm totally safe to keep around Kaavya!) Whew, that was close.
Anyway, I remember lots of other things as well. I can remember what my very best friend Eileen Perfume was wearing the day Los Angeles exploded in to riots over the Rodney King verdict. (Maroon boucle turtleneck sweater, black crinkle skirt with blood red roses here and there and black knee-high boots, which she had folded down slightly. She had her hair half-up and half-down, eyeliner on the lower lids, ruby lips and no other makeup.) Like you probably are, Im a devoted bibliophile who cant bear to be without something to read at all times. My memory kicks in here, too, since as edifying as Gita Mehta or Vikram Seth might be, knowing what either of them wrote at some point aint gonna get me an A on anything.
So this memory of mine, which I suspect you got toosometimes, it is almost dangerous, yes? I can remember being in graduate school (has it already been five years since I graduated? Mein Gott.) and being so exhausted, because I worked full-time (as required by my program) AND took all my classes from 7-10 pm each night. Id read books and articles throughout the entire day and then sit at my computer around 1 am, after the dinner dishes had been washed and my then-boyfriend had been tended to like some entitled Maharajah who keeps asking for pani! when hes supposed to be asleep. Then, exhausted to the point of sleeping mid-keystroke, I would type. And sometimes, Id go back and see a sentence and think, weird.
Id feel that odd tingle that unmoored recognition evokes. And then slightly horrified and suddenly awake, Id realize that I had typed, almost verbatim, something I had read earlier in the day. Sometimes, what I had borrowed wasnt even brilliant. Id shake my head then. I was terrified of getting caught, since I was certain that one day Id turn in a paper that contained a sentence that I hadnt re-recognized in time. Dear Lord, please dont let it be something craptacular if I get in trouble, at least let me parrot something genius. But thats not how my little universe works, PK. When I was in third grade, my dramatic ascent up the Spelling Bee ladder was destroyed when I misspelled a word so simple, Im too ashamed to even type it. Its always the little things that I trip over, in the end.
I dont believe that you are the torment-deserving fraud that many of my fellow pajamahadeen think you are. I dont think you copied those words, that youre a plagiarist. I think that either one of two things occurred, neither of which is really your fault:
1) You pulled an Akka and regurgitated something that was playing on your mind. Like the number 170. Even if this is true, I blame your handlers for not vetting a manuscript that had received sooo much attention, in this post-Frey era. Perhaps I am mistaken, but arent they supposed to read, re-read and triple read what theyre hawking? I cant help but believe that this is quite common in terms of the writing process, this borrowing a phrase or voice. If this public flogging hasnt happened often to other writers, then I feel like some critical step was missed in this entire process. Even if Im wrong, and the process allows that manuscripts DONT get vetted as carefully as a cabinet-level appointment (WTF?) I think you didnt intend to lift such craptacular writing. If you were pushed over the ethical edge by exhaustion, pressure and your Ivied obligations, I think you wouldve chosen someone better to borrow from.
2) And this one is the more sinister, more galling and I think, most possible. I keep reading that your book was initially quite different. Darker. Truer. Kaavya-er. I heard that THAT manuscript wasnt marketable, not with a pinkish cover and some strappy stilettos. I heard that lots of Kaavya disappeared and in its place, fluff was stuffed in to Opal Mehta. I dont know if youre being set up (that would be even MORE sinister! Perish the thought!) but I do think that someone else did that heavy lifting, dear girl. And I think youre the one whos getting marched up to Golgotha for it.
Speaking of Golgotha, perhaps the reason I have so much faith in you is because I suddenly have a lot in me, quite literally. I spent enough time in church last week to qualify being religious as a part-time job, potentially with bennies, if its like Starbucks. I emerged from my week of holiness, calmer, stronger, fortified with light. Buoyed by hope and a renewed determination to see good everywhere, in everyone, in all things. If I can have faith that bread and wine when consecrated by a priest, become the body and blood of my savior, I can give my PK the benefit of my doubt. Let people trash and thrash you, Kaavya. Blogging has thoroughly taught me that the bile which they spew (my sinful self included, natch) indicates more about them then you, anyway. You deserve to be innocent until proven otherwise. And I believe that you might just be exonerated of these heavy, back-breaking charges which lay now on your similarly irrantharam shoulders. And if you should fall, while on your way, no matter what causes you to stumble, you will have my prayers and support. We are all human, pots and kettles the lot of us and we all deserve a little bit of compassion.
Sincerely,
Anna-akka




