Writer’sBlock

Bunny Suraiya, the author of Calcutta Exile, is a newspaper columnist. Her first short story was published by Khushwant Singh in the Illustrated Weekly. She lives in Gurgaon with her husband Jug Suraiya and her dog Mili.

  • QDescribe your favourite writing space?

    My home office, sitting with my back to the window, stolidly facing a blank wall, with a proper keyboard and optical mouse plugged into my laptop. A gently breathing and occasionally snuffling dog lying on the rug behind me helps.
  • QDo you have a writing schedule?

    I like to write only in the mornings. The fact that my morning starts at 11 am is particularly enjoyable.
  • QEver struggled with writer’s block?

    Not since I gave up writing advertising copy!
  • QWhat inspires you to write? Do you have a secret trick, or a book/author that helps?

    The fear of an imminent deadline, say for an article or a review, is a powerful inspiration. For my novel, no inspiration was needed. I couldn’t wait to sit down to it every day.
  • QCoffee/tea/cigarettes — numbers please — while you are writing?

    I’m afraid this is a really boring answer: no coffee, tea, cigarettes or anything else. I don’t drink the first two, except for a cup of organic Indian tulsi-ginger tea when I wake up, and gave up smoking 10 years ago. I resent stopping work for anything until lunch time.
  • QWhich books are you reading at present?

    Lijia Zhang’s Socialism is Great, Stephen Hunter’s Master Sniper and V.S. Naipaul’s Area of Darkness.
  • QWho are your favourite authors?

    Tough question. Alexander McCall Smith, Jane Austen, Philippa Gregory, Robert B. Parker, P.D. James, Chaim Potok, Ken Follett… too many, really.
  • QWhich book/author should be banned on grounds of bad taste?

    None. I don’t believe in bans. I think if an author is really awful, readers will refuse to read him/her, leading to an automatic market-driven “ban”.
  • QWhich is the most under-rated book?

    The Young Visiters (sic) by Daisy Ashford, written when she was just nine years old, and The Diary of a Nobody by George and Weedon Grossmith. Both these books are wonderful, absolute gems, but few people have even heard of them.
  • QWhich are your favourite children’s books?

    The Harry Potter series. I’m a complete Potter-maniac. Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials series comes a close second.

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I want to begin with a little story that was told to me by a leading executive at Aptech. He was exercising in a gym with a lot of younger people.

Shekhar Kapur’s Bandit Queen didn’t make the cut. Neither did Shaji Karun’s Piravi, which bagged 31 international awards.