Imperial Historian, on 20 September 2014 - 03:19 AM, said:
It's not been as hot as I would have thought actually, hottest it got was 35 and was mostly fairly comfortable at around 30 degrees. The forts in Rajasthan were hugely impressive! I need to come back and see kumbhalgarh and chittaugarh which are apparently even more so. I was going to go to Kashmir, but with the recent flooding was advised not to go.
I hadn't thought about the languages, though India is huge I guess the market for fantasy in each language isn't very large, and the majority of readers are probably reading English for a wider selection maybe in time some more Indian fantasy authors will appear. Bollywood from my limited sampling seems full of fantastical influences.
Chittoregarh is huge. You can't see the whole fort properly in one day. Its a real pity you coundn't visit Kasmir, but the present floods are absolutely devastating. If you want to visit the Himalayas, best time is the high summer: late April, May, June. After June the monsoon hits, you get heavy rain and that causes landslides and flashfloods in the mountains.
Regarding Indian fantasy one major problem is the mental block that prevents many people from seeing fantasy as a legit genre. So when I was trying to explain fantasy to my relatives they asked "So, these are basically English
rupkatha? (Rupkatha basically are folk-tales with heavy fantasy elements which are primarily used to entertain very small children). While the English speaking audience does read a bit of fantasy and laps up stuff like Game of Thrones, its still basically LotR, Harry Potter, YA stuff like Eragon, Artemis Fowl etc. Most people by English fiction mean authors like Sidney Sheldon, Paulo Coelho, or Indian authors writing in English like Amitav Ghosh, Salman Rushdie, Jhumpa Lahiri etc.
As for Bollywood, weeellllll its basically bollywood. Wish fulfillment fantasy and cliches are its stock in trade. I do not expect one mature fantasy based film in the next ten years.