"There is nothing like a 'second novel syndrome'. There is no such pressure if your debut has been well received and an expectation the second one should be the same. Atleast not for me," Mirza told PTI in an interview.
Mirza's debut book "The Collaborators" about his experiences of growing up in Kashmir was shortlisted for the Guardian First Book Award and the Shakti Bhatt Prize.
"Award or bestseller list do motivate authors but that definitely doesn't lead to a pressure when they write further," he says.
"I was very clear of the location and setting it where the entire sequence of events is going to happen. I did not want to settle it at any other place...Somehow it makes me feel in a comfort zone," says Mirza who was born and brought up in Srinagar before he moved to Delhi and then to London.
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"I have been thinking about this story for years, not in full blown form but images, sketches, a loose story of this girl and boy and the area have been in my mind for long," he says.
"I work in a different manner. I set a plot and I then visit those places to verify them and rework on the draft to see how can I add details to make the story more realistic," he adds.