Diksha Basu
Diksha Basu is an American writer and actress.[1][2] She is the author of the novel The Windfall which is under adaptation for a television series by Shonali Bose.[3][4] BiographyDiksha Basu was born in Delhi,[5] to the sociologist Alaka Malwade Basu and economist Kaushik Basu,[2] who later became the Chief Economic Advisor to the Government of India and then the Chief Economist at the World Bank.[2][6] She grew up in Delhi during the 1990s till the age of 10.[7] When she was a teenager, she moved to Ithaca, New York with her family.[1][8] Basu states that after moving to upstate New York, she would keep visiting Delhi every 4 to 6 months.[9] She eventually graduated from Cornell University with a Bachelor of Arts in economics,[1] and in the French language as part of a double major.[6] In 2008,[10] she moved to Mumbai to pursue a career in acting,[6] and lived in the city for four years.[5] She featured in the comedy series Mumbai Calling (2007) and in the drama film A Decent Arrangement (2011).[6][10] She began writing while in Mumbai, and her debut novel Opening Night was published by HarperCollins and launched in 2012 by Chetan Bhagat.[10] The novel depicted the struggles of an American-born actor who moved to Mumbai to pursue a career in acting.[10] It was described as a deeply personalised non autobiographical work of literary fiction.[11] Basu joined the Columbia University School of the Arts to attain a Master of Fine Arts in creative writing, from where she graduated in 2014.[3][11] She also featured in the memory film A Million Rivers (2017).[12] In the meantime, she married the music producer Mikey McCleary and gave birth to her daughter in 2017.[13] Her second novel The Windfall was also published and launched in the same year,[7] it was a humorous fiction marketed as a debut novel and depicted the life of a middle class Indian man who had suddenly encountered wealth.[14] It received positive critical acclaim and was signed in for a deal to be adapted into a television series.[9][3] According to ELLE magazine, it broke stereotypes of exoticism surrounding India while according to The Wire, it was a "shrewd and unstintingly funny story about the neuroses of New Delhi's 1%".[1][8] The Hindu gave it a mixed review objecting at its lack of nuance and inaccuracies in social and cultural depictions.[14] In 2020, she published her third novel, Destination Wedding.[15] Books
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