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Chetan Bhagat
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Chetan Bhagat On Being Called ‘Male-Fantasy Writer’: ‘If I Wrote Creepily, My Stories Would Collapse’

by jummy84 November 4, 2025
written by jummy84

Chetan Bhagat, one of India’s most popular and polarising authors, has once again found himself addressing long-standing criticism — that his books are written from an overwhelmingly male perspective. In a recent conversation, the author of 12 Years: My Messed-Up Love Story opened up about being labelled a “male fantasy” writer and defended his style, intent, and accessibility-driven storytelling.

In his interview with Pinkvilla, Chetan Bhagat was asked about trolls who claimed his latest novel romanticises immaturity rather than exploring a nuanced emotional relationship. The author, visibly exasperated by the perception, responded sharply: “How do I write a book then? Do I co-author the book with a woman? What is this nonsense? I have been writing for 21 years. If the story is not mature, it will not work. If I handle it in a creepy, vulgar way, it will just collapse.”

Also read: ‘I Used To Puke Putting Toothbrush In My Mouth To Lose Weight’, Ashnoor Kaur Recalls Early Days of Her Career

The writer — who has been both celebrated and ridiculed for his bestselling novels — admitted that he faces trolling long before his books even reach readers. “Even before I announce the book, people decide what they are going to say about it,” he said, pointing out that much of the criticism stems from preconceived notions about who he is and the kind of stories he tells.

Chetan Bhagat

Chetan Bhagat sees a hypocrisy in being stereotyped

Bhagat also reflected on what he sees as hypocrisy in the way audiences approach gender representation in writing. “That’s classic stereotyping. These people tell me that I stereotype, but they are stereotyping me,” he said, addressing those who assume that a middle-aged male author writing about younger female characters must be projecting personal fantasies. “They say that if a 45-year-old man writes about a 21-year-old woman, it must be a fantasy. But it is not my fantasy,” he clarified.

Expanding on his challenges as a writer, Bhagat highlighted how misunderstood authors can be in India’s literary ecosystem. “It’s very difficult to be in the writing profession. I am very sensitive to people who write. There is no money. There is no fame. You work for years and you get nothing,” he said, stressing that writing requires discipline and emotional vulnerability that readers often overlook.

He also explained why he keeps his language and storytelling simple — a deliberate choice, not a limitation. “My final presentation is very simple because I have to reach the common man,” Chetan Bhagat said. “I talk in Hindi and present myself as a grounded boy. The way I talk, the way I mention tea — it makes people think ‘isko baja bhi sakte hai.’ And I’m successful, so they see me as someone who doesn’t deserve it because they have struggled in their writing careers.”

In a moment of candid self-awareness, Bhagat added with a laugh, “If I weren’t Chetan Bhagat, I would have hated Chetan Bhagat.” The statement summed up his acceptance of his polarising identity — both admired by millions for democratising English fiction in India, and dismissed by purists who question his literary depth.

Bhagat also shared a rare moment of validation that came from one of Indian cinema’s most respected lyricists and writers, Gulzar. “One person who routinely sends me messages, talks about my columns, and praises my work is Gulzar sahab,” Bhagat revealed with pride. “One of the first things he told my mother was, ‘I wish I could write like your son.’ Nobody who is doing so well and is as successful ever says that.”

This endorsement, Bhagat implied, matters more than the countless anonymous critics online. For him, appreciation from a writer of Gulzar’s calibre underscores the universality and emotional resonance that even the simplest of words can hold.

Chetan Bhagat’s journey as a writer has been both meteoric and controversial. Since his debut with Five Point Someone in 2004, he has carved out a unique space in Indian publishing — not as a literary novelist, but as a storyteller for the masses. His novels, often exploring love, ambition, and middle-class aspirations, have become pop-culture milestones and Bollywood blockbusters. Five Point Someone inspired 3 Idiots; One Night @ The CallCenter was adapted as Hello; The 3 Mistakes of My Life became Kai Po Che!; 2 States mirrored his own inter-community marriage; and Half Girlfriend was turned into a romantic drama by Mohit Suri.

Despite his mass appeal, Bhagat continues to battle perceptions that his work lacks depth or gender balance. But his defence remains consistent: he writes stories that speak to ordinary people, not literary elites. His choice of words, tone, and characters is designed for connection — not for critical validation.

In an age where social media outrage often shapes public perception, Bhagat’s resilience stands out. Whether one sees him as a commercial craftsman or a flawed provocateur, he remains one of the few writers capable of sparking national debate with every release. As he puts it himself — “If I were really as immature or sexist as they say, my books wouldn’t have lasted 21 years.”

November 4, 2025 0 comments
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Cricket in L1
Lifestyle

Author Chetan Bhagat: I don’t, but Indians care about films because they don’t read books

by jummy84 October 15, 2025
written by jummy84

For the 90s kids thriving on Reddit today, the most pop-ular (or unpopular) author back then was Chetan Bhagat. His dealing of nonchalant characters, with rarely something unique, gained popularity for falling into familiar tropes and got much-talked about. So much so that Chetan’s books even became instant fodder for mainstream Indian cinema.

Author Chetan Bhagat talks about his new book, 12 Years, and how he managed to delve into the world of new age romances at 51.

Cut to 2025, the world has moved on, and so have the modern day characters or couples. Now, those living in the age of situationships have got a new talking-point with Chetan 2.0 returning to his OG loved-genre of love stories.

Excerpts from an interview:

Q. It’s 12 years since you last wrote about romance. The world has changed, and you’re back to writing the same genre. Why an old formula?

People love my love stories and that’s because there’s no formula in them. Each time it’s a fresh take on fresh issues. The age gap romance, in 12 Years, seemed bold and fresh and something I had not attempted yet. That’s why I felt it had something unique, which made me get back to love stories after more than a decade.

Q. So, this genre is not chosen with the agenda that it gets adapted for the screen; like your previous works?

That carries an assumption that I care a lot for the screen. I don’t care; Indians care because they don’t read books. So they are always asking me, ‘When is the movie coming?’ As if movie is the ultimate Nobel Prize! They believe that in Indian society films are up in the hierarchy of art forms; but it’s not. Films are the lazy man’s form of art consumption. I’ve had five adaptations of my works, and been part of six movies. It took a good amount of time from my life. But, I’ve reached an age where I don’t care much for that. I mean, ultimately, the joy you get from reading 2 States (his last book in the same genre), you’re not going to get from watching the movie.

Any book will trigger a reader’s imagination… I was also in a phase where I was fascinated by Bollywood. I grew up watching movies and saw the same actors call me to say, ‘We love your stories’. Of course you get carried away… But, finally, I realised that the true essence of what I enjoy doing is not that… For me, the biggest creative satisfaction come from writing a fresh story with fresh conflict and societal observations.

Q. How did you rewire yourself as a writer, to adapt to the modern age of ‘situationships’?

When my first book came out, there were no smartphones or even cellphones. I remember people used to tell me how they’d tear up the books in parts to exchange and read… Today, everybody has a phone in their pocket and is constantly entertained. So I had to change my plots too, embrace videos and social media and maybe that’s the reason I’m still around. I’ve tried to change and see the new generation non-judgmentally. Like I didn’t understand ghosting. For my value system it’s very rude. But I’m trying to come to terms with this, and the times we live in.

It’s a 51-year-old man writing a story about a 33-year-old guy falling in love with a 21-year-old girl. If not executed right, this bold story could’ve come across as creepy, strange and weird. But after 21 years of writing, I think I’ve reached a stage where I can handle this all, sensitively.

October 15, 2025 0 comments
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