Namita Gokhale
Namita Gokhaleon Aug 28, 2019
About & Early Life
Namita Gokhale (born 26 January, 1956) is an Indian writer, publisher and festival director. She is the author of sixteen books including nine works of fiction.Things to Leave Behind has been published in November 2016. It is a rich, panoramic historical novel that shows Kumaon and the Raj as you have never seen them. Illuminated with painstaking detail, taking on the complications of caste, race and culture, this is a compelling historical novel of epic sweep and is described as Namita Gokhale's most ambitious novel yet. Namita Gokhale won the Sushila Devi Literature Award for her novel Things to Leave Behind in January 2019. She was awarded in the 'Best Book of Fiction Written by a Woman Author' category at the inaugural edition of Bhopal Literature and Art Festival, 2019. Things to Leave Behind has received the Best Fiction(English) Jury Award at the Valley of Words International Literature Festival 2017 and is on the long list for the 2018 International Dublin Literary Award. Namita Gokhale was conferred the Centenary National Award for Literature by the Assam Sahitya Sabha in Guwahati in 2017 for her literary contributions as well as her service to the nation in supporting and showcasing literary talents and creating a literary environment in the country The new double edition Double Bill: Priya and Paro brings together the cult classic Paro: Dreams of Passion and Priya: Take Two in one classic volume, taking the liberated, brazen and all-too human Paro and her natural counterpart, the more timorous Priya, to new readers and old. Lost in Time: Ghatotkacha and the Game of Illusions her new book for young readers released 30 November 2017. It is an intense yet tender look at a rare friendship as well as the abiding puzzles of the past. Gokhale also edited the recently published The Himalayan Arc: Journeys East of South-east. The anthology focuses on a crucial, enthralling, politically turbulent, yet often under-reported part of the Himalayan belt. As a sequel to the anthology In Search of Sita: Revisiting Mythology published in 2009, Finding Radha: The Quest for Love, published in December 2018 is collection of poetry, prose and translation that enter the historical as well as the artistic dimensions of the eternal romance of Radha and Krishna. Gokhale has contributed an introduction to the forthcoming biography of Ra'na Liaqat Ali Khan--The Begum, a well-researched portrayal of an intrepid and passionate stateswoman and wife of Liaquat Ali Khan, the first Prime Minister of Pakistan. She was born in Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh in 1956 and spent her childhood between New Delhi and Nainital, in the foothills of the Himalayas. A Kumaoni by birth, she married to Rajiv Gokhale when she was eighteen. Gokhale dropped out of college after a conflict over the bias against Indian literatures in the curriculum. She then published the film magazine Super from Bombay in the late seventies.Publishing
Publishing is Gokhale's other love. She is the founder-director of Yatra Books(with Neeta Gupta), founded in January 2005. ‘Yatra’ stands for cross-cultural literary journeys, including translation. Yatra Books is a multilingual publishing company specialising in original creative writing and high quality translations in English, Hindi and Indian regional languages for the emergent internal market. It has co-published over 400 titles in Indian languages in collaboration with Penguin India, Dorling Kindersley, Cambridge University Press India Ltd., and since 2012 with Tata-Westland. Yatra Books, in collaboration with Tata-Westland, has launched translations of bestselling authors such as Amish Tripathi, Ashwin Sanghi, Anuja Chauhan, Rashmi Bansal and Jo Nesbo in seven Indian languages, including Hindi, Marathi, Odia, Bangla, Telugu, Gujarati and soon in Kannada. It has independently published translations from European languages into English and Hindi, in key collaboration with institutions like Sciences PO in Paris, for the translation of Christophe Jaffrelot's India Since 1950; Ramon Llull Institute, Barcelona for the translation of Catalan short stories into Hindi, and TEDA (Turkish Culture Ministry) for a series of Turkish translations into Hindi. It has also recently collaborated with the Mikhail Prokhorov Foundation in Moscow and Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts in New Delhi, for a Russian to English translation of Himalayan Folktales, collected by the Russian indologist and traveler Ivan Minayev in 1875, published as Clever Wives and Happy Idiots.
With an extensive experience in trade publishing, Yatra Books believes in empowering the Indian reader and connecting local and international voices. Translating Bharat, Reading India,one of Yatra Books' latest titles, is a collection of essays that focuses on the specifics of translation and is a celebration of the work it has done in the field of Indian language translations in the course of the last decade.
Namita Gokhale is also the Festival Director of 'Jaipur BookMark'(JBM). Conceptualized as a Business-to-Business segment, JBM is held parallel to the Jaipur Literature Festival and focuses on Global Rights Translation. It provides a platform for publishers, literary agents, translation agencies and writers to meet, talk business deals, listen to speakers from across the world and perhaps even sign the occasional contract. About the symposium Gokhale says The Jaipur BookMark looks afresh at issues, choices and opportunities before the publishing industry today.
The 'Namita Gokhale editions' was a signature imprint published in association with Roli Books which introduced several notable titles.

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