Test match: The only thing that can keep Ramachandra Guha away from writing

Press Trust of India  |  New Delhi 

Whether it is a leisurely Sunday or a busy Monday, it makes no difference to Ramachandra Guha, who has a habit of writing reams of pages daily, but come a test match and the cannot help but put down his pen -- even if it means "2-3 days" at a stretch.

"I write everyday... I never take time off, Mondays and Sundays make no difference. Except when there is a test match, then I might take two days off or for that matter, a match in -- a particulary exciting test match -- and I might decide 'Ok 2-3 days I am not going to work'," told

And, for the test match need not to have playing in it necessarily, in fact, on the contrary; he enjoys it more if is not playing at all.

"When is not playing I find I enjoy it more because then I am not emotionally involved. For example, a really good competition between and is always a treat to watch," he added.

The of best-selling "India After Gandhi", Guha, well-known for his penchant for writing non-fiction tomes, follows a very "sturdy routine" which includes writing from "9 am to 1 pm" everyday and "2-3 hours in the afternoon" also.

Of course, all this is done with no distraction either from mobile phone or internet.

He recently came up with a new book, "Gandhi: The Years That Changed The World, 1914-1948", published by (Allen Lane). The book is a sequel to his earlier book "Before India" (2014).

Throwing light on his writing style further, the 60-year-old said his professional life is composed of two parts: "research on the road" and "writing in Bangalore".

"If I am out of Bangalore, I am doing research in the archives. So I will be in Teen Murti, National Archives (New Delhi), (London) or Sabarmati Ashram looking at old files and letters from 9 am to 6 pm taking notes. That is one part -- the research and travel.

"Then I go back to with all those notes, and classify them, categorise them, make sense of them and start writing," said the Bangalore-based

Guha, who otherwise rued the fact that has no archives or "materials library", said it is a place well-suited for him to write.

"It is a very good place to write because I am with my family, have that comfort zone, the weather is always very nice.

"And also because you are distant from the clutter and the noise, far from This way you don't get distracted, so essentially when I am in Bangalore I am reflecting, writing and re-writing, and when I am in I am doing my research," he said.

The writer, unlike some other writers, does not have a writing ritual per se.

But that said, he too has his own little idiosyncrasy -- the one he just can't do away with when writing -- "printing everything that he writes".

"Whatever I write I print even if it is unfinished... let's say I have written 1000 words I will print out those pages and look at it. I have to look at the printed word to revise.

"Maybe I am wrong, I know many young people who tell me that it is an 'old-fashioned thing' and that they do the revision on screen, but for me it works this way only," he added.

Having mastered the craft of communicating academic research work to people in an accessible language, ask Guha, the of contemporary India, what is the mantra behind it, and he replies with a smile, "No mantra. Just hard work and experience. And anyway, I think one gets better with 40 years of practice, right?".

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sun, September 30 2018. 13:00 IST