"In public, everyone wanted to be a decent person, no matter how false that facade was," said Jaiswal. When his identity is eventually revealed, Mastram - played by actor Rahul Bagga - is denounced as an immoral man. In "Mastram", which opens in cinemas in May, the protagonist dreams of writing novels but unemployment forces him to start writing erotica. He began constructing his own version of the writer's life.
"The ones who are publishing now don't even print their names or logos on the books, so there is no way of knowing where they came from," said Jaiswal. Their lurid covers feature half-naked women with lurid titles and nearly all have explicit sex scenes. Today, books stalls at railway stations and markets in North India stock the newer versions, usually hiding them under a pile of magazines. Jaiswal said he found several authors writing under the pseudonym in later years, but the language was sleazier than that of the original Mastram. "I tried looking for the original Mastram everywhere, but the problem is that most of the publishers who printed his books have shut down," he said.īooksellers never openly displayed Mastram's works, bringing them out only if a customer asked for them. Jaiswal, best known in the Hindi film industry for co-writing the 2012 revenge thriller "Gangs of Wasseypur", chose Mastram as the subject for his debut film as director.
Did his family know?" Jaiswal, 28, told India Insight in an interview. "Every time I read the books, I used to wonder who this man was and what on earth he must be telling his kids about what he did to earn a living. Mastram's works included "Yauvan ki Pehli Baarish" (First Rains of Youth), "Sexy Nurse" and "Manchali Bhabhi" (Salacious Sister-in-law). The identity of the author, who used the pseudonym Mastram, was never revealed, but the film's director Akhilesh Jaiswal said he remembers sneaking the books in as a teenager, one of millions of adolescents in conservative India with little access to erotica before the Internet made pornography widely available.
A new Bollywood film traces the fictional journey of a real-life writer of erotica whose racy low-cost works in Hindi spurred sales at bookstalls and pavement shops across India in the 1980's and 90's.