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Nalini Jones, author of "What You Call Winter." (Douglas Mason) |
Nalini Jones was born in Newport, R.I., to a father from Boston and mother from Bombay (now Mumbai). She grew up in the United States and frequently visited her grandparents in India.
She loved sleeping underneath mosquito netting and playing with the curtains hanging in the doorways of her grandparents' bungalow. Her fascination with India inspired the stories in her debut collection, "What You Call Winter" (Knopf), published this week. The stories take place in Santa Clara, a fictional town in India that, like Jones's grandparents' neighborhood, is largely Catholic. A little girl home alone finds her birthday gift hidden in the closet, a man sees his long-dead father riding a bicycle around town, a woman becomes absorbed in a soap opera called "The Bold and the Beautiful."
Jones, now living in Norwalk, Conn., will read from her collection at 7 p.m. Sept. 13 at Porter Square Books, 25 White St., Cambridge.
Among this year's students is Paul Austin, 52, an emergency-room doctor in North Carolina who is returning for the fifth time. Last year at Bread Loaf, he met an editor from W. W. Norton who offered him a book contract. His collection of nonfiction stories, due out next year, has the working title "Something for the Pain: An ER Doctor's Story."
The scroll, valued at $2.43 million, is on display at the Boott Cotton Mills Museum, in Lowell, through Oct. 14. It has drawn widespread interest, recently attracting coverage by the Italian, Dutch, and Danish press. The BBC plans to film a marathon reading of the novel beginning on Sept. 5, the date of publication 50 years ago.
"Loving Frank," by Nancy Horan (Ballantine)
"The Careful Use of Compliments," by Alexander McCall Smith (Pantheon)
Jan Gardner can be reached at JanLGardner@yahoo.com. ![]()

