"Then I went to London to work with BBC. All this time, I was reading and writing little things, parking it somewhere but never showing it to anyone. I wasn't confident. So thinking that I could write, it took me another ten years to write."
Asked how exactly he began to write novels, Waheed recalls a particular incident. "I remember one winter night in my little apartment in London… I have a Kashmiri corner, walnut desk and papier mache screen.....I sat and started writing about this boy walking among this long line of dead corpses. It was a long section… I wrote late into the night."
And for his second novel, after his wife told him to "get the novel out before the child”, for once he says, "I stuck to a deadline".
He doesn't remember any specific reason on why he must write a different book, but Waheed says "there are premises, stories, that get in your head, some take hold some don't, and this one goes back many years."
After talking to a friend, who is a medical professional, about the challenges of their job, Waheed started to think "of a man who actually plays by the book, follows rule but wants to be a successful practitioner". That, in turn, became the outline of the protagonist's character in Tell Her Everything.
And since the protagonist is a doctor in a foreign country, a migrant in search of a better life, "how far will he go, how much will he compromise," in pursuit of a better life, is the question that Waheed started to explore. Hence, the story is also about a migrant, "a small-town man gone abroad," explains Waheed.