Monday, February 2, 2026
ADVT 
International

Who Is 'The Perfect Candidate', Wonders Indian-American Author Tamraparni Dasu

Darpan News Desk IANS, 14 Feb, 2016 01:10 PM
    An Indian-American author of a new novel about a former spy-turned-politician has a piece of advice for Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump: "Veer to the centre, and pick a positive, uplifting message."
     
    "Fear-mongering can only take you so far," says Tamraparni Dasu, by day a research scientist working on problems in statistics, stream mining, and machine learning, and author of "The Perfect Candidate", the second in her "Spy, Interrupted" trilogy.
     
    "Also, pick a smart woman as a running mate," she says on behalf of the campaign team of her novel's hero, a former CIA operative with an Indian-American wife, running for a US Senate seat.
     
    "No, not Carly Fiorina. Nikki Haley?" she asks, referring to former HP CEO, who has quit the presidential race, and the Indian-American governor of South Carolina.
     
     
    "Intolerance of any kind should be rejected forcefully, particularly when it is institutionalized and turned on those least able to fight it," Dasu told IANS in an email interview.
     
    "Politicians will say and do anything to get elected," she said when asked about the intolerance debate in India and the kind of rhetoric heard on the US presidential campaign trail.
     
    "And very often the media fans the fire by amplifying and repeating the most obnoxious and heinous words," Dasu said.
     
    "That's why it was important to me that the hero, Stephen James, should have no part in it; his intolerance is turned towards people's behaviour - for example, terrorist acts."
     
     
    In Dasu's opinion, "there is no perfect candidate in the presidential race at the moment, not counting her fictional hero Stephen James, who "is principled, fearless and wants to save the world".
     
    Among the Democrats, Bernie Sanders "is impractical and too focussed on one issue, (Hillary) Clinton has a credibility problem, and the Republicans all want to take us back to medieval times".
     
    She, however, believes that Hillary Clinton is the most qualified and capable candidate in the field.
     
    Dasu said she was inspired to write spy novels as "I have always been a fan of literary espionage, starting with Graham Greene's 'Our Man in Havana', and the early works of John le Carre, particularly the Karla trilogy".
     
    "The focus is on characters and their motivation rather than pure plot developments," she said. "And being a spy is such a rich and complex human condition - to deceive in order to defend."
     
     
    Dasu said her novels had more romance and social drama than spy craft because "I am curious about the lives of spies rather than their deeds or craft".
     
    "How do they relate to the people around them? How do their significant others ever trust them? What do they need to do in order to keep their professional habits from seeping into their personal interactions?"
     
    "I wanted to write about the spy as seen through the eyes of the people close to them," Dasu said. "And, I have to admit, I love Jane Austen as much as I love literary espionage."
     
    "So, romance and social drama and other situations faced by every thinking woman naturally creep into my writing."
     
    But she disagreed "strongly that the South Asian characters in the book are stereotypical".
     
    "First of all, most South Asian characters and writing focus on immigrant angst and adjustment issues - Jhumpa Lahiri, Chitra Divakaruni - the whole culture clash between Western and Indian values."
     
     
    Most of the South Asian characters in her book, she acknowledged, are "very well adjusted and happy, to the point of perfection".
     
    But the last book in her trilogy "is very different from the first two books," she said. "It has a unique setting and an unusual story arc."

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Cargo Ship Runs Aground At The Deep-Water Bulk Terminal In Squamish, No Injuries Or Damage Rported

    Cargo Ship Runs Aground At The Deep-Water Bulk Terminal In Squamish, No Injuries Or Damage Rported
    A Transportation Safety Board spokesman says no one has been hurt and there doesn't appear to be any damage to the vessel.

    Cargo Ship Runs Aground At The Deep-Water Bulk Terminal In Squamish, No Injuries Or Damage Rported

    Miss Philippines Crowned Miss Universe After Botch Up, Internet Reacts To Blooper And Steve Harvey

    Miss Philippines Crowned Miss Universe After Botch Up, Internet Reacts To Blooper And Steve Harvey
    The ceremony's host Steve Harvey mistakenly mixed up the winners' names at the event, where India failed to clinch the title for the 15th straight year.

    Miss Philippines Crowned Miss Universe After Botch Up, Internet Reacts To Blooper And Steve Harvey

    Police Help Mexican Woman Give Birth In Car

    Police Help Mexican Woman Give Birth In Car
    Two Mexico City police officers helped a 23-year-old woman give birth to a baby girl inside a car, officials said.

    Police Help Mexican Woman Give Birth In Car

    US Woman Gets 26 Years For Microwaving One-Month-Old Daughter To Death

    US Woman Gets 26 Years For Microwaving One-Month-Old Daughter To Death
    Mirabelle Thao-Lo suffered burns to 80 per cent of her body — some deep enough to damage her internal organs

    US Woman Gets 26 Years For Microwaving One-Month-Old Daughter To Death

    Sikh Americans Lead Efforts To Counter Attacks On Minorities

    Sikh Americans Lead Efforts To Counter Attacks On Minorities
    The coalition aims to encourage interfaith dialogue to address increased discrimination, mistrust, and violence, particularly against Sikh and Muslim Americans.

    Sikh Americans Lead Efforts To Counter Attacks On Minorities

    Sikh Americans Lead Efforts To Increase Interfaith Dialogue

    Sikh Americans Lead Efforts To Increase Interfaith Dialogue
    The National Sikh Campaign (NSC) has joined 15 diverse civil rights and faith-based organizations at a White House event aimed at reinvigorating American traditions of inclusion, freedom and interfaith cooperation.

    Sikh Americans Lead Efforts To Increase Interfaith Dialogue