Jug Suraiya

Jug Suraiya
Jug Suraiya
Occupation Author and Columnist
Nationality
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India

Jug Suraiya is a prominent Indian journalist, author and columnist. He is best known as a satirist and columnist. Suraiya is a former Editorial Opinion Editor and Associate Editor of the Times of India.

He is Delhi-based and schooled at La Martiniere Calcutta.

Contents

Columns

Suraiya writes the popular column Jugular Vien, which used to appear in the Sunday edition of the Times of India and now appears on Saturdays.,[1] a second column Second Opinion appears once or twice during the week,[2] and the cartoon strip Dubyaman which earlier used to appear daily.[3] Jugular Vein is a satirical column that skewers everything, from the mundane to the serious. Its everyday focus and travel writing are also well known.

Khushwant Singh has referred to Suraiya as "our own Art Buchwald".[4] He is a writer distinguished for satire, wit and humour in his writings. Suraiya reflects on his personal reminiscences while drawing astounding parallels of some of the most famous personalities or gently touching at the absurdities which have become part and parcel of our lives.

Cartoon strip

Post 9/11 Suraiya created a daily cartoon in the Times of India called Dubyaman with Neelabh Banerjee, staff artist of The Times of India. It is loosely based on US President George W. Bush. According to Suraiya, he first thought of Dubyaman as a kind of a superman type hero who would signify the military might and muscle of America, but unfortunately has the brain of a George W. Bush, thereby making him more dangerous. The idea was to show that far from being some sort of a superpatriot, this man could be a potential danger not just to his supposed enemies, but also to his friends and to his own country's people. Slowly but steadily Dubyaman has acquired local flavour with Jug frequently making fun of Indian politicians.

He became the first Asian to win the Pacific Asia Travel Association gold award in 1983,[5] for travel writing.

Anthologies of his humorous writings

  • Delhi Belly and other misadventures in the middle kingdom (1991)
  • A Taste for the Jugular (1994)
  • The Great Indian Bores (1996)
  • Juggling Act (2005)
  • A Tika for Jung Bahadur (2006)

Books on travel and non fiction

  • The interview and other stories (1971)
  • Homecoming (1977)
  • Rickshaw Ragtime (1993)
  • Word Is a Four-Letter Word: Selected Writings (1994)
  • A Portable India (co authored with Anurag Mathur) (1994)
  • Mind Matters (2003)
  • Where on Earth Am I? - Confusions of a Travelling Man (2004)
  • Calcutta: A City Remembered (2005)

Life

Suraiya lives in Delhi with his wife Bunny and Brindle, a stray dog who, according to Suraiya, 'adopted the couple' some years ago. But unfortunately Brindle passed away a few days back.Suraiya published a very heart touching article on Brindle's stay.

References

External links


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