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NRI, Viswanathan's
publisher recall all editions of the novel
New Yorkm April 27, 2006
Sharda Brothers
NRI Viswanathan's publisher of How Opal Mehta
Got Kissed, Got Wild, and Got a Life" said today that it has
decided to recall all editions of the novel.
Her planned book promotion tour in London
has also been cancelled
Publisher requested all retail and wholesale stores to stop selling
the novel and send back any unsold copies.We are pleased that this
matter has been resolved in an appropriate and timely fashion.
- NRI, Viswanathan apologized to McCafferty for
unconscious copying Few Phrases: Kaavya Viswanathans
Opal Mehta includes several passages nearly identical
to another authors earlier work; that work's publisher is
looking into the matter ......Full
Story
February 22, 2006
The six-figure sophomore
How Kaavya Viswanathan got noticed, got an agent,and got a monster
two-novel contract
By David Mehegan, Globe Staff |
CAMBRIDGE -- She seems at first like a delicate person, dressed
in green, but it soon becomes clear that Kaavya Viswanathan, 19,
is capable of heavy lifting. Arriving at Harvard as a freshman in
September 2004 would have been challenge enough for most young people.
But a month later another little project presented itself.
Out of the blue came a contract for close to $500,000 from publisher
Little, Brown & Co. for a first novel she had only started and
a second she had barely imagined. She was 17.
No problem. While taking a full five-course load, Viswanathan banged
out ''How Opal Mehta Got Kissed, Got Wild, and Got a Life"
in her free time. The book is done and due out in April, and Little,
Brown is convinced it has signed up one of the hottest young talents
in fiction.
''I still don't believe it, even now," Viswanathan said in
an interview by the library fireplace in Winthrop House. ''It is
so surreal."
To Little, Brown, it's real indeed and worth the price. ''Opal
Mehta" is a clever novel by a promising author, directed at
an audience the publisher hopes will eat up this tale of a girl
who loves her overbearing parents but learns to get in touch with
her own dreams and ambitions.
Michael Pietsch, the head of Little, Brown, said the publisher
wasn't out beating the bushes for such a book but grabbed it when
it was offered. ''It's purely a response to the work and idea,"
he said. ''She has a remarkable range of capabilities, a seeming
effortlessness. That's more astonishing than anything." He
added, ''I've been in this business since 1978, and it's my first
experience signing up an author in her teens; in fact, with several
teen years to go." There's enough early buzz and interest for
at least a 75,000-copy first printing.
Many a writer flogs the keyboard for years, tossing novels and
stories over agents' and publishers' transoms, without success.
But sometimes it all just comes together, without apparent struggle.
This is one of those cases.
Kaavya Viswanathan was born in Madras (now called Chennai), India,
and lived in England from age 3 to about 12, when her parents, who
are doctors, moved to the United States. In England and New Jersey,
she was mad for music (she sang and played piano) and horses and
loved reading, too. ''I would get into trouble because I wanted
to stay up late, and my mom would come into the bedroom when I was
5 or 6, and I would have the flashlight under the blanket,"
she said. ''It became a punishment if I was in trouble -- no reading
at meals, no books at the table."
In her novel, the parents of an Indian-American girl from New Jersey
are so obsessed with her going to Harvard that starting when she
is in kindergarten they hatch a long-term strategy called ''HOWGIH"
-- ''How Opal Will Get Into Harvard" -- to develop her academic
qualifications. But in Opal's Harvard admission interview, the dean
tells her that she also needs to have some fun, have some social
experiences -- get a life, in other words -- to be suitable for
the university.
Opal and her parents are shocked, and her father quickly cooks
up a new plan, ''HOWGAL" -- ''How Opal Will Get a Life."
With her parents driving her (physics magazines in the house are
replaced with teen magazines), Opal pursues popularity in the same
relentless way that she built her academic resume. Of course, she
succeeds. But as she has more fun, becomes a favorite at school,
and gets a boyfriend, she becomes increasingly conflicted about
her own real longings and ambitions.
Despite the similarities in background between herself and her
character, Viswanathan said firmly that she is not Opal and that
her novel is not an autobiography. ''We were not the stereotypical
South Asian family -- 'You've got to go to medical school,' "
she said.
Her father is a neurosurgeon and her mother is an obstetrician,
not currently in practice. ''They were always amazingly supportive,"
Viswanathan said. ''They never tried to push me. It was always,
'Do what you want, find out what makes you happy.' The complete
opposite of this book at the beginning." Nevertheless, Viswanathan
said, ''I think they were a bit surprised, because I am the first
person in the family -- aunts, uncles, cousins -- who has ever shown
the slightest inclination to a creative side."
They got over their surprise quite early, though. ''When she was
3 or 4, she was an extensive reader and a great thinker," said
her mother, Mary Jayanthi Sundaram. ''She liked poetry as a young
child. At age 7, when she was in the third grade, she was a great
horseback rider and decided to write a book, 'Pinewood Stables.'
It was about 100 pages."
Having read ''Opal Mehta," Sundaram said, ''It's very funny,
and I realized I could identify a little bit of me and my husband."
But, she said, ''We are not like the Mehtas. We always gave her
a lot of freedom to do what she wanted. We encouraged her to slow
down. She's very driven. Even now, she's taking five courses. We
told her there is no need to take five. She never listens."
She added: ''We're extremely proud of her; I'm always smiling when
I talk about her."
Except for the lack of parental pressure, however, it's pretty
clear that Opal Mehta's social milieu is not altogether alien to
Viswanathan
''My mom's dad bought me my first copy of 'Great Expectations'
when I was 6 or 7," she said, ''and every time I talked to
him or saw him -- he's in Madras -- he would say, 'Don't forget,
I have great expectations for you,' and this great expectation was
that I would be a doctor. When I made it clear that I'm not doing
pre-med requirements, not going to medical school, he was disappointed.
Not in a rip-the-family-apart, you're-disowned-forever kind of way,
but there was a level of, oh she wants to be a writer. How nice."
Despite her interest in the humanities, Viswanathan attended high
school at the Academy for the Advancement of Science and Technology
in Hackensack, N.J. ''I was a complete misfit," she said. ''I
did well, but I had to work really hard. Left to my own devices,
all I would do is take literature classes." She also found
time to be editor of the school newspaper and be on the debate team.
She had written poems and short stories since she was a child,
even published a few in children's magazines. She showed her short
stories to Katherine Cohen, her high-school college counselor, who
was herself an author (''Rock Hard Apps: How to Write the Killer
College Application") represented by New York agent Suzanne
Gluck of the William Morris Agency. Cohen showed the samples to
Gluck, who was impressed. Eventually the young writer was referred
to Jennifer Rudolph Walsh, another Morris agent.
Walsh said she knew right away that Viswanathan had the talent.
What she didn't have was a ''commercially viable" work. Viswanathan's
original idea for a novel was much darker than ''Opal." The
agency referred her to 17th Street Productions, a so-called book
packager that specializes in developing projects in young-adult
and middle-grade fiction. The editors there proposed that Viswanathan
put her mind to something lighter, something closer to her own background.
''After lots of discussions about 'finding my voice,' " Viswanathan
said, ''I sat down and wrote them a fun, chatty e-mail about myself,
which is where the voice and idea for Opal came from." She
worked with 17th Street to flesh out the concept.
''They sent it to me, and I flipped over it," Walsh said.
''We all recognized that Kaavya had the craftsmanship, she's beautiful
and charming, she just needed to find the right novel that would
speak to her generation and to people beyond her years as well.
We worked on it some more and sold it for oodles and boodles of
money." Neither author nor agent would confirm or deny the
$500,000 figure. The offer, which followed a brief auction, was
first reported in The New York Sun and picked up in the Indian press.
A typical advance for a first novel would be $20,000 or less.
''There was more shaping to this book than we generally do,"
said Asya Muchnick, senior editor at Little, Brown. Viswanathan
had written a few chapters and a detailed plot synopsis, and had
to get the book finished in and around her studies (she recently
changed her concentration from history and literature to English).
''In the last few months of my freshman year, I was writing 50
pages every two weeks," she said. ''It was pretty bad. Every
time I wasn't in classes, I would just write. In the last two weeks
of school, I was studying for finals while trying to get the last
50 pages done."
This year, Viswanathan has been able to have more of a normal student
life. Although she's still working hard -- she's a test grader for
the economics department and hopes to work as a research assistant
in the English department -- it's clear her life isn't the all work/no
play grind that Opal Mehta's is at the start of the novel.
''I'm not a recluse," she said, adding later by e-mail: ''I'm
in a sorority, Kappa Kappa Gamma, and a social club, the Isis Club.
I love going out with my friends, so weekend nights find me on the
party circuit. I'm also addicted to shopping, manicures and pedicures,
eating expensive dinners, and watching 'Sex and the City.' "
She spent last summer in Paris.
And the second novel? Not exactly a sequel, but more from Opal
Mehta's world. ''I still love Opal," Viswanathan said, ''and
I feel she definitely has room to grow. I don't want to abandon
her yet."
After college, she said, she expects to work on Wall Street, possibly
in investment banking. ''Writing is not anything I see as my job,"
she said. ''It's just something I would do. Even now, I get itchy,
I want to start writing again, and I haven't had time because I've
been studying economics for finals all day. It's not some extraordinary
activity. It's just, you go to meals, you sleep, you write."
Most prestigious
American publisher $500,000 deal with NRI Harvard Freshman author
Ms. Viswanathan was the youngest writer
the agency had taken on in its 109-year history.
New York, April 22, 2005
BY PRANAY GUPTE
- Special to the Sun
Kaavya Viswanathan is set on becoming an investment banker when
she graduates from Harvard University in 2008, but a phone call
that the 17-year-old freshman received from a literary
agent might just cause a change in her plans.
The agent, Jennifer Rudolph Walsh of the William Morris Agency,
told the Franklin Hills, N.J.-born Ms. Viswanathan that Little
Brown & Company, one of the oldest and most prestigious
American publishers - now part of the Time Warner Group - agreed
to a two-book deal with the teenager. The sum approached $500,000,
a staggering amount for an unpublished writer, let alone someone
who'd barely left home for college.
"I still cannot believe this. I never expected this would
happen," Ms. Viswanathan told The New York Sun yesterday.
"I had only vaguely thought of becoming a writer. But a book
contract? From a major publisher? This is so incredibly unbelievable.
It's so hard to believe that I'm going to be able to walk into
a bookstore and see something that I wrote on display there."
Both her books will be fiction. Ms. Viswanathan said she expects
to deliver the first volume, tentatively titled "How Opal
Mehta Got Kissed, Got Wild, and Got In," by the end of next
month. The novel is expected to be published next spring.
Little, Brown's publisher and senior vice president, Michael
Pietsch, said last night through an aide that the company doesn't
comment on authors' advances. Mr. Pietsch is handling Ms. Viswanathan's
book, along with another Little, Brown editor, Asya Muchnick.
Most first-time writers of fiction receive advances of less than
$10,000, according to the editor of Writer's Digest Books, Donya
Dickerson.
Ms. Viswanathan said she's already written more than 150 pages,
or more than a third of the manuscript.
"It's a little tough to do this writing and also juggle
classes and the homework," she said. "This is a big-time
commitment. It's not like writing an essay for a class."
Ms. Viswanathan began writing the novel while still at the Bergen
County Academy at Hackensack. She's the only child of her Indian-born
parents, Viswanathan Rajaraman, a neurosurgeon, and Mary Sundaram,
a gynecologist.
"Everybody in my family, including my parents, won science
prizes," Ms. Viswanathan said. "I was the one with the
writing gene - and I've no idea where that came from. My parents
are still in a state of shock. When I've gone home on some weekends,
they look at me working at my computer and surely wonder, 'Who
is that strange person?' "
Her parents, who are vacationing in India, could not be reached
for comment yesterday. And how did Ms. Viswanathan's novel come
to the attention of Ms. Walsh at William Morris?
"My parents had gone to college in India, and they felt
unfamiliar with the college-application process in America,"
Ms. Viswanathan said. "So they signed me up with Dr. Katherine
Cohen's IvyWise as an extra safeguard." IvyWise is a service
that prepares students for college admissions.
"I always wanted to get into Harvard," the teenager
said, "and I received an early acceptance."
Ms. Cohen said yesterday that when she saw Ms. Viswanathan's
resume, she wondered why the student hadn't highlighted the fact
that she was writing a novel. Then she asked Ms. Viswanathan to
bring in her work.
"I was so charmed by what I read," Ms. Cohen said.
"I immediately sensed that here was a star in the making.
So I called my own agent at William Morris, Suzanne Gluck, and
told her about Kaavya."
Ms. Gluck showed the manuscript to Ms. Walsh, who handles fiction
at the agency. She was impressed and shopped it around, and Little,
Brown offered the highest advance. Ms. Viswanathan was the youngest
writer the agency had taken on in its 109-year history.
"I still remember the moment when Kaavya called me and said,
'Have you heard? Have you heard?' "Ms. Cohen said. "When
I heard the size of the advance, I nearly fell off my chair. I
have several novelist friends, and nobody I know has received
that kind of money. I'm very proud of her - and I'm proud that
I was able to play a role in her success."
Strangely, Ms. Viswanathan's novel is a case of life imitating
art. Her plot was hatched well before she signed up with Ms. Cohen
and was accepted by Harvard.
"The main character is a girl of Indian descent who's totally
academically driven, and when she senses from a Harvard admissions
officer that her personal life wasn't perhaps well-rounded, Ms.
Mehta goes out and does what she thinks 'regular' American kids
do - get drunk, kiss boys, dance on the table," Ms. Viswanathan
said.
Does her fictional character get into Harvard? Only the novel
will tell.
- May 21, 2004:
If your child's high school counselor is overworked or underinformed,
you may want to hire a freelancer. Harvard-bound Kaavya Viswanathan,
from Franklin Lakes, N.J., signed on with IvyWise, a counseling
firm with offices in New York and Beverly Hills, during her junior
year. "They take all the raw material and help you put it
together in the way that an admissions officer is going to be
most impressed by," she says.
- Thirteen Academy Students Named Finalists for Govenor's School
March 2003 ... Pat Cosgrove, Principal of the Bergen County
Academies, recently announced that thirteen students were nominated
for the Governor's School. The winners will be announced later
this month. The students are:
School of the Arts: Jennifer Friedman (Art); Kaavya Viswanathan
(Creative Writing); Paige Reilly (Drama); Judy Yoo, Rebecca
Lee, Louis Mark, Daniel Kozlowski and Sherry Chung (Instrumental);
Joe Gregg (School of Engineering & Technology); Jennifer
Luo (School of Environmental); Elizabeth Gordon (School of International
Studies); Lina Jun (Public Issues and the Future of New Jersey)
and Ben Herschenfeld (School in the Sciences).
The Governor's School of New Jersey, established in 1982, is
a unique summer residential program for artistically and academically
talented students. For one month each summer, the Governor's
School offers intensive learning experiences on six college
campuses for students who have completed their junior year of
high school. Each Governor's School campus has a special focus.
Students are nominated through guidance counselors at their
high schools. Approximately 600 students participate in the
program each year.

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