Writer’sBlock

When my readers tell me that my writing tickled their funny bone or that they saw things from a new perspective, it becomes an inspiring moment

Vikas Rathi is a chartered accountant and an IIM graduate. He is the author of Resident Dormitus.

  • QDescribe your favourite writing space?

    Having a busy career, I have to be able to write whenever I get time — during office lunch breaks, at airports, in flights etc. However, given a choice, my favourite writing space will be a coffee shop where I can turn up early enough to grab the sofa corner.
  • QDo you have a writing schedule?

    I don’t adhere to a set schedule. What works for me is to simply start writing. Once I start, the ideas flow and I tend to get very absorbed in them so much so that I start to lose track of time. I have been asked to leave a few coffee shops because it was their closing time and I obviously wasn’t allowed to spend the night there.
  • QEver struggled with writer’s block?

    Yes. But so far, it hasn’t lasted more than a few days. What works for me is that I start to play the situation in my mind and see where it goes. I would fantasise about the characters during the day and dream about them at night. Mostly, I would wake up in the middle of the night knowing exactly where the story needs to go and then start writing.
  • QWhat inspires you to write? Do you have a secret trick, or a book/author that helps?

    I write because I feel I have a unique take on any particular situation or phenomenon. Writing it down crystallises my theory even better. When my readers come and tell me that my writing tickled their funny bone or that they saw things from a new perspective, it becomes an inspiring moment of self-realisation. That is what fuels my writing.
  • QCoffee/tea/cigarettes — numbers please — while you are writing?

    Surprisingly, not much. I would generally start with a cup of coffee when I first sit down to write. But soon, I will become completely absorbed in my writing and conveniently forget about the coffee.
  • QWho are your favourite authors?

    My favourite author would be Fyodor Dostoevsky. I would recommend The Idiot by him to all. There are other specific works that I also like The Outsider by Albert Camus, English, August by Upamanyu Chatterjee, The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger.
  • QWhich book/author should be banned on grounds of bad taste?

    There are a lot of books out there and I am limited by time. So I have to choose and as a result, I have ended up reading mostly high-quality fiction. If there is a bad book, it hasn’t reached me yet.
  • QWhich is the most under-rated book?

    English, August by Upamanyu Chatterjee. It is an absolutely fantastic book, Booker Prize material.
  • QWhich are your favourite children’s books?

    The Famous Five series by Enid Blyton.
  • QWho is your favourite literary character?

    Prince Myshkin and Rogozhin from Fyodor Dostoevsky’s The Idiot.

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