Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's writer daughter Daman Singh, who will soon come out with a biography of her parents, says the account will be more personal than political.
Singh presented her new work Sacred Grove at the Kovalam literary festival which began today, says she has not yet chosen a title for the new book.
"I think I can't be critical of them in the book. I will try to present the different aspects of their life. Though politics may figure in the book, it is not about politics, but a personal account," she said in an informal chat with reporters on the sidelines of the festival.
Answering a question, Singh said she believed her father, along with several others, could pull India out of economic crisis and put the country on a path of economic growth. More investments were coming in health and education sectors, she said.
"Though I don't feel qualified to evaluate the policies, I find the results as encouraging. I have a lot of faith in my father. He feels for the common man personally," she said.
On how the prime minister took the strain of the highest job at his age, she said he was actively doing his work now. "The moment he feels he is not fit, he will step down."
Asked about the chances of her joining politics, Singh quipped, "I am not interested in politics. I am bad at economics and politics. I am happy as a writer." Singh said Indian writing in English was definitely exciting at the moment. "I don't know whether Indian writing has come of age, but with the kind of books coming out, it is certainly a reader's paradise. More Indian authors are getting their works published abroad and a few have got the Booker Prize. These works have also catered to what Indian readers want," she said.
To a query on Arundhati Roy's stinging criticism of the central government's policies, Singh said Roy was a powerful writer. "With her experience, perspective and language, Roy has a way of communicating with readers, though I can't agree with everything she writes," she said.