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| Mum holding me. |
I was born in Calcutta, West Bengal, India. Rudyard Kipling called
Calcutta the 'city of dreadful night'; Lord Clive, the founder of British
India, called it 'the most wicked place in the universe'; and Nehru,
the first Prime Minister of independent India, called it 'the city of
processions, of political manifestations.' Calcutta recently cast aside
its colonial moniker and officially changed its name to Kolkata.
When I was two months old we immigrated to Canada. My father had a
full scholarship to study for his doctorate in chemical engineering
at the University of Waterloo. My mother obtained her master's degree
in physics from the University of Manitoba and later her doctorate
from the University of California, Berkeley.
I grew up in Pinawa, Manitoba, an idyllic town on the shores of the
Winnipeg River. As a kid I spent summers running around outside, playing
hide and seek, kick the can, hopscotch and dodge ball. In winter we
made snowmen and igloos, tobogganed down a steep quarry called Yo-Yo
Hill, and went cross country skiing through pine forests and apple
orchards. Oh, and my parents made me go to school and take ballet,
figure skating, swimming and piano lessons.
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| Nita and I in India in Puri, on the Bay of
Bengal. Nita is wearing the fisherman’s cap. |
My favorite family event was the weekly drive to the garbage dump
to watch for bears. I also loved our jaunts to the town library, where
I checked out the same Curious George books a million times. I adored
a picture book called The Bear Who Couldn't Sleep, starring
a baby bear who refused to hibernate in winter. My favorite authors
were Enid Blyton, Agatha Christie, Alexander Key, C.S. Lewis and others.
Every night my father read to me from C.S. Lewis's The Chronicles
of Narnia or Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings trilogy.
When I was four we adopted my little sister, Nita. Born in Flin Flon,
Manitoba, she is a Native Canadian of Cree origin. Yes, there really
is a place called Flin Flon.
At the age of seven I wrote my first story about an abandoned puppy
I found on a beach in Bengal. I've always loved animals and longed
to rescue every stray creature that crossed my path.
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| Whitely and I in our front yard in Pinawa,
Manitoba. |
My beloved dog, Whitely, was half Samoyed, half Husky — the quintessential
Canadian dog.
One day Whitely followed me to school and bit a little girl, so we
had to send him to a farm. No, he didn't die. He really lived on a
farm, where he got to run through meadows and chase butterflies and
mice. I wrote a story about him.
Then, inspired by my maternal grandmother -- an English writer who lived in India -- I wrote a mystery, The Green Secret at the
age of nine. I illustrated the book, stapled the pages together and
pasted a copyright notice inside the front cover. After that I churned
out a series of mysteries and adventure novels with preposterous premises
and impossible plots.
Then I put them away in a box and grew up.
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| My dad and I at my U.C. Berkeley graduation. |
When my father landed a professorship at the University
of California, we made our way to sunny Santa Barbara. I graduated
from the University of California, Berkeley with degrees in anthropology
and psychology.
I tried on jobs like new sets of clothes — veterinary assistant,
office manager and law student — and then rediscovered my love
for writing fiction. My first short story appeared in Nerve, and
other stories followed in several literary journals including The
Green Hills Literary Lantern, Möbius: The Journal of Social Change,
the University of Baltimore's Passager: A Journal of Remembrance
and Discovery, Lynx Eye and Writing for Our Lives.
"Ordinary Children" was nominated for a Pushcart Prize and won Honorable
Mention in Lynx Eye's Captivating Beginnings contest. "Goddess
of Learning" appeared in the anthology New to North America: Writing
by Immigrants, Their Children and Grandchildren and is assigned
reading in college classes. "Satin and Lace" is used as a model
story at the Whidbey Island Writers Conference and in Skagit Valley
College classes on Whidbey Island, in Washington state. A contributing
writer for three regional history books, I've also penned dozens of
articles for Puget Sound newspapers.
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| My husband, Joseph, and I. |
Wendy Lamb Books/Random House published my first middle grade/YA novel, Maya Running, in early 2005, and my second children’s novel, Looking for Bapu in
October 2006. The paperback will be available September 9, 2008. Pocket
Books/Downtown Press released my first novel for adults, Imaginary Men, in late 2005, and my second novel for adults, Invisible Lives, in September 2006. I’ve
written two more novels for children, The Silver Spell and Rani
and the Fashion Divas, both published by Mirrorstone Books/Wizards of the Coast.
I’m at work on a third children’s novel for Wendy Lamb Books/Random
House. The book is tentatively titled The Furball Diaries and should be
released in 2009. I’m a member of The Authors Guild and the Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators.
My husband, Joseph Machcinski, was once a Boatswain’s Mate on the U.S.S. Carl Vinson. He’s
now a landscaper, nurseryman and avid Master Gardener. We live
in the Pacific Northwest with three crazy cats and a black rabbit named
Friday.
Professional Biography
Anjali Banerjee was born in India, raised in Canada and
California and received degrees from the University of California, Berkeley.
When she was seven, she wrote her first story about an abandoned puppy on
a beach in Bengal.
The Philadelphia Inquirer called her debut young adult novel, Maya
Running (Wendy Lamb Books, 2005), “beautiful and complex” and “pleasingly
accessible.” The Bulletin of the Center for Children’s
Books called the book “eloquently composed” and “insightfully
written.” Maya Running is on the American Library
Association’s “2007 Popular Paperbacks for Young Adults Nominations” list,
Chicago Public Library’s ”Best of the Best” list of
children’s novels published in 2005, and the New York Public
Library’s “Books for the Teen Age 2006” list.
Penguin Books India published Maya Running on the Indian
subcontinent and in Singapore. India Today Book Club, India’s biggest
book club, chose Maya Running as a “Pick of the
Season,” and the novel received accolades in major Indian publications,
including INDOlink, The Hindustan Times and Deccan Chronicle.
Film rights for Maya Running were recently sold to Intrepid
Film Arts Inc. and MediaBrat Inc.
Horn Book Magazine called Anjali’s second novel for children, Looking
for Bapu (Wendy Lamb Books, 2006) ”a moving story about
surviving an unexpected, shocking loss;” Booklist called
the book “imaginative,” “hilarious” and “an
excellent read aloud”; and The Philadelphia Inquirer called
it “sophisticated and very likable.” Of the many elements
in the novel–generational differences, friendship, religion, and
grief immediately post-9/11—Mary Harris Russell of The Chicago
Tribune wrote, “Banerjee deftly keeps all this in balance.
We never lose sight of either the serious issues—the family’s
loss and love—or the comedic ones.” King County Library System
chose Looking for Bapu as one of the Best Books of 2006;
Seattle Public Library included the book on its “2006 Books for
Giving” list. Looking for Bapu has been nominated
for two state library awards: Hawaii’s 2008 Nene Award, and Washington
state’s 2009 Sasquatch Reading Award. The paperback will be released
September 9, 2008.
In Otober 2005, Anjali’s first novel for adults, Imaginary
Men (Downtown Press/Pocket Books, 2005) was chosen as a Book
Sense Notable Book. The Seattle Times called Imaginary
Men “a romantic comedy equal to Bend it Like Beckham”; Booklist called
it “charming” and “fairytale-like”; Publishers
Weekly called it a “fun debut...a Bridget Jones’s
Diary meets Monsoon Wedding-style escapade.” RT
BOOKreviews magazine called Anjali’s second novel for adults, Invisible
Lives, “magical” and “joyful,” and The
Seattle Times called it “poignant” and “surprising.” Droemer-Knaur,
a German publisher, will release Invisible Lives in German
in April 2009. The title will be Der Hochzeitssari (The
Wedding Sari).
Anjali’s Pushcart Prize-nominated short fiction has appeared in several
literary journals including Writing for Our Lives (twice), Lynx
Eye (twice), Möbius: The Journal of Social Change, Nerve,
Elements and the University of Baltimore’s Passager: A Journal
of Remembrance and Discovery, and in the anthology New to North
America: Writing by Immigrants, Their Children and Grandchildren. Her
short story “Satin and Lace” is used as a model story in Skagit
Valley College classes and in workshops at the Whidbey Island Writers’ Conference;
and “Goddess of Learning” and Anjali’s novel, Imaginary
Men, are assigned reading in California college classes.
An alumnus of Hedgebrook, which is an esteemed retreat for women writers
on Whidbey Island, Anjali has been a speaker at the South Asian Literary
and Theater Arts Festival (SALTAF®) at the Smithsonian Institution in
Washington, D.C., many schools and libraries, and has led workshops for
Field’s End, a Bainbridge Island, Washington-based writers’ community
offering classes taught by award-winning authors. A contributing writer
for three regional history books and local newspapers, Anjali lives in the
Pacific Northwest with her husband, three cats and a rabbit named Friday.
People & Places
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You can't cross the sea merely by standing and staring at the water. Don't let
yourself indulge in vain wishes. - Rabindranath Tagore
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