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Author Jhumpa Lahiri on why writing in Italian is like ‘falling in love’

  • English exposed her Bengali parents’ vulnerabilities while Italian gave her ‘a real and new sense of quiet’
  • The Pulitzer-winning writer is one of the star guests at this year’s Hong Kong International Literary Festival

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Author Jhumpa Lahiri, who is one of the star guests at this year’s Hong Kong International Literary Festival. Photo: Liana Miuccio

“There is zero spontaneity in life.”

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Jhumpa Lahiri is telling me about her disorienting return to work at Princeton Uni­versity, where the acclaimed writer is director and professor of creative writing. “We teach everything online, which is strange and frustrating and exhausting. We have no choice.”

A weekly coronavirus test is mandatory for anyone spending more than eight hours on campus, in New Jersey, in the United States. Lahiri can’t go anywhere without being checked in and out. “They want to know exactly where you have been sitting,” she says.

There are compensations. “I am actually in an aban­doned library. It is one of the few positive developments of Covid. The campus is literally abandoned.” This in turn leads to concern for the “hundreds of thousands of young people who have no option but to move forward with their intellectual lives”. The class of 2020 was meant to include Lahiri’s son, Octavio, who was due to start university this year but is instead “stuck at home with us”.

I basically only write when I am in Italy. When I’m [in America] it is very hard for me to feel like a writer
Jhumpa Lahiri

The 53-year-old was also in Princeton when the pandemic began. “It was very depressing as the reality settled in. I did very little writing,” she says.

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