Podcast: Shubha Sunder on “A Very Full Day”

Apple Podcasts logo

Listen on Apple Podcasts.

Listen on Google Podcasts.Google Podcast logo

Spotify Logo Green

Listen on Spotify.

Transcript: Shubha Sunder Podcast.

Shubha Sunder speaks to managing editor Emily Everett about her story “A Very Full Day,” which appears in The Common’s fall issue. In this conversation, Shubha talks about writing stories set in India, and how she built out the insular world of Indian retirees that “A Very Full Day” centers on. She also discusses teaching creative writing to undergrads, her revision process, and her forthcoming collection of stories Boomtown Girl, which won the St. Lawrence Book Award.

Image of Shubha Sunder's headshot and the Issue 22 cover (pink seashell on light-blue background).

“I was really writing from a place of nostalgia. I wanted to capture Bangalore, but not just because I wasn’t there anymore. I’ve found that I’m not really homesick for India or Bangalore when I’m here in the US, which is strange. When I’m most nostalgic is when I’m back there, because it’s so transformed. The place that I left is now unrecognizable. So I wrote from a place of that feeling. The collection really came together in the final stages of revision, when I was revising the book as a whole. Then it acquired a whole new meaning for me because I have a three-year-old son now, who is growing up in America and is going to be American, at least for the foreseeable future. And I was able to view the collection as something for him. This is going to be his way of knowing something about his motherland. But it does also feel for me like the end of a certain stage of my writing. I don’t want to write any more about Bangalore in this way. The novel I’m working on now is very much set in America, in Boston.”


Shubha Sunder’s debut short story collection, Boomtown Girl, won the St. Lawrence Book Award and is forthcoming from Black Lawrence Press. She has published stories and essays in New Letters, The Common, Narrative Magazine, Michigan Quarterly Review, Catapult, Crazyhorse, and elsewhere. Her fiction has received honorable mention in The Best American Short Stories, won the Crazyhorse Fiction Prize and Narrative “30 Below,” and been shortlisted for The Flannery O’Connor Award, The Hudson Prize, and The New American Fiction Prize. She is a recipient of the Massachusetts Cultural Council Fellowship and the City of Boston Artist Fellowship. She teaches creative writing at GrubStreet and at Massachusetts College of Art and Design.

Read Shubha’s story in The Common at thecommononline.org/a-very-full-day.

Read more at shubhasunder.com.

The Common is a print and online literary magazine publishing stories, essays, and poems that deepen our collective sense of place. On our podcast and in our pages, The Common features established and emerging writers from around the world. Read more and subscribe to the magazine at thecommononline.org, and follow us on Twitter @CommonMag.

Emily Everett is managing editor of the magazine and host of the podcast. Her debut novel is forthcoming from Putnam Books. Her stories appear in the Kenyon Review, Electric Literature, Tin House Online, and Mississippi Review. She holds an MA in literature from Queen Mary University of London, and a BA from Smith College.

Podcast: Shubha Sunder on “A Very Full Day”

Related Posts

image of the author and issue cover

Podcast: Maria de Caldas Antão on ”My Freedom”

MARIA DE CALDAS ANTÃO
Maria de Caldas Antão speaks to managing editor Emily Everett about her poem “My Freedom,” which explores the idea of freedom, and what it might mean to be free: personally, politically, physically, philosophically.