Background
Rahul Bhattacharya was born in Bombay (Mumbai) in India, and lived briefly as a baby in Calcutta. His father was Bengali, though born and raised in the small towns of Uttar Pradesh, in the north, and interior Maharashtra, in the centre. His mother was Gujarati, born and raised in Bombay.
Education
From about the age of three until the age of nine he lived in a small town called Secunderabad – "the kind of town where houses might have wells in the backyard and goats at the gate." The family moved back to Bombay in 1988 where Bhattacharya studied in English. He graduated from college with a degree in mathematics, although he admits to have "little recollection of lieutenant".
Career
He currently resides in New Delhi. Bhattacharya"s first book is Pundits from Pakistan: On Tour with India, 2003-2004 (2005), a non-fiction work about the Indian cricket team’s tour of Pakistan in the year 2004. While the book is largely about cricket, it also tells of how the tour had an impact that went far beyond sub-continental cricket in terms of the goodwill and sense of bonhomie it created between the people of the two countries, thereby encouraging peaceful relations.
lieutenant was the first major sporting encounter between India and Pakistan in 15 years, a period when the two countries had fought a war.
In 2010 it was voted number four of the Ten Best Cricket Books of all time in The Wisden Cricketer. lieutenant was shortlisted for the Cricket Society Award.
His second book is a novel set in Guyana, entitled The Sly Company of People Who Care. Widely praised, it has drawn Bhattacharya a host of comparisons with V. South. Naipaul.
Ondaatje Prize judge Nick Laird said he had "seldom read a book with so much energy", while fellow judge Michèle Roberts called it "one of the most exhilarating novels I have read for years" and praised the author"s invention of "a beautiful and original language, mixing street poetry and sharply sensual poetry".
Kamila Shamsie, also on the judging panel, said "the combination of Bhattacharya"s prose style, his great curiosity and generous-though-not-uncritical eye, the light touch with which he conveys knowledge, and the sheer pleasure of his company". A cricket journalist since 2000, he is now a contributing editor with Wisden Asia Cricket and has been writing for the Wisden Cricketers" Almanack since 2003. He also writes for The Guardian.
Views
Quotations:
"the combination of Bhattacharya"s prose style, his great curiosity and generous-though-not-uncritical eye, the light touch with which he conveys knowledge, and the sheer pleasure of his company".