The Writer, The Reader, And A Spy’s Relief
A friend’s compliment leads to a reflection on writing, readers, and an amusing wartime episode involving Somerset Maugham A friend once told me something that I took as a compliment. He said, “Raj, I have always thought that had you been a judge, you would have written beautiful judgments.” I thanked him, though the remark made me think about writing itself. When one has been writing for years, and across different subjects and genres, the act of writing becomes relatively easy. The rules are largely the same everywhere. One must keep the reader in mind, share something that the reader can understand, relate to, and perhaps benefit from. In an ideal situation, the writer almost becomes invisible. Only the message passes through and is remembered. For that to happen, however, the writer must possess a quality that is surprisingly rare—humility. Writers often fall into two traps. One is the temptation to sermonise and dispense unsolicited advice. The other is the subtle intoxication tha...