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'Women are so self sufficient that they don't need guys anymore'

Ashwina Vakil

It's not a book about male bashing: it's quite an affectionate book about men's foibles, meant mainly to shake them up, prod them into taking a look at themselves, break through their smug, complacent little world. Of course if I know guys at all, and I think I do, the common reaction will be, 'this isn't about me at all, it's about the jerk next door'!" She is right of course, not many men are going to want to own up to the imbecilities that Shobha has attributed to them.

But interestingly, while the book is written with her usual acerbic wit, under all the fun and sarcasm she has managed to hit upon some very unpalatable home truths about men.

"Men have to realise that women aren't going to accept them on the old terms anymore. The whole man-woman equation is being renegotiated; women are so much more self sufficient than they've ever been, they don't really need guys anymore. Men don't see it in that perspective and it shocks them when they realise how marginalised they are becoming. They go into instant denial! The book is really aimed at starting a dialogue, there's no other message. It's just an amused look by a woman who has seen life, and who likes guys. I'm not antagonistic at all but I can see them in a certain perspective, mainly indulgent and affectionate but also very exasperated and impatient."

Needless to say, Shobha had a ball writing the book, in fact she can't seem to stop writing it; every 'jerk" she meets provides her with fresh ammunition, and she's driving her publisher nuts with ceaseless requests to include new chapters and paragraphs. Undoubtedly, the book has attracted the usual amount of impassioned attention, probably more. Shobha, of course, is ready to take it on the chin; if there's one thing she's learned over the years, it's been how to survive.

For the casual and somewhat envious onlooker it might seem as if Shobha De has led a charmed life. The common perception is of a woman who 'has it all', a myth she is quick to dismiss. "I don't think I have it all but a lot of the reaction (to her and her books) has to do with that. They feel 'she has it all and she gets away with it.' There is something about my whole package that puts their backs up, there is a certain level of resentment."

For the past twenty-five years Shobha has been working on a persona that intimidates not only men but also a large number of women, who react often with venom to everything about her. For someone who is fiercely supportive of her own sex, this comes as something of a surprise.

Her latest book might lead to some bonding among the women however. They are finally going to realise she's been on their side all along. "I've noticed that it's always the male critics who take potshots at me. The women critics have been consistently supportive, if they haven't liked a book they've said why, they haven't been petty. It's the men who resort to name calling. It's very easy to put a successful woman down by calling her names. It's the oldest trick in the book and men have been doing it for years. It doesn't suit them to have someone shake the status quo," she remarks bitterly.

Kind courtesy: Society

Shobha De will appear on the Rediff Chat on Wednesday, February 19, 2000 hours IST (0930 hours ET), to discuss her bestseller. Be there!

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Shobha De, continued
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