Wr.
Home / The Notebook / Writing From a Small Town
Writer's Life & Industry

Writing From a Small Town: The Jetpur-to-Screen Path

By Bhavik Sarkhedi7 min read15 July 2026

The distance from a sari-printing town to a film set is real. It is also the best material you will ever own, if you stop apologising for it.

The small town is not your handicap. It is your material. I know how that sounds from where you are sitting, because I sat there too, in Jetpur, a town that prints saris and has never once been mistaken for a place that makes films. For years I treated my origin as the thing I had to overcome. I had it backwards. The origin was the one asset nobody in a big city could copy.

Let me be honest about the disadvantage first, because pretending it away helps no one. If you grow up far from the industry, you do not absorb its language by osmosis. You have no uncle who knows a producer. You do not bump into a director at a cafe. The informal network that a city kid inherits for free, you have to build from zero. That gap is real, and anyone who tells you it is all in your head has never had to cross it.

The gap is a fee, not a wall

Here is the reframe that changed how I worked. The distance from a small town to a film set is a fee, and a fee is something you can pay. A wall is something that stops you. Most people quit because they mistake the one for the other. They feel the extra effort required, decide it means the thing is closed to them, and go back to the safe life the town expects.

I left mechanical engineering in 2015 and started Write Right in Ahmedabad in 2016 with no network and no permission, and the company taught me that the fee is payable in a currency I actually had: work, and lots of it. What the city kid gets through contacts, the small-town writer earns through volume and quality until the work makes its own introductions. Slower, yes. Closed, no. If you want the full road from nobody to working writer, I mapped it in how to become a screenwriter with no connections. This piece is about the one thing that road cannot teach you, which is what to do with where you come from.

Write the town, not around it

The instinct of every small-town writer is to prove they can write like the city. To set the story somewhere glamorous, fill it with people who talk the way film people talk, and scrub out every trace of the place that made them. It is the worst mistake you can make, and I made it for years.

The specific is what travels. A story rooted so deeply in one real place that it could not have happened anywhere else is the story that reaches a stranger on the other side of the world. Nobody outside my state has been to Jetpur. Everybody has known a father who measured love in silence, a shopkeeper who gives credit to strangers and refuses it from friends, a whole community that celebrates and suffocates you in the same breath. The universal hides inside the local. You reach the many by going all the way into the one.

Write what only you could have seen, and the world will lean in to look through your eyes.Wr. Sarkhedi

This is not sentiment. It is craft. The details you grew up inside are ones a city writer would have to research and still get slightly wrong. You know the exact sound of the town at 4 a.m., the particular way a rumor moves through it, the food, the shame, the tenderness. That specificity is expensive for anyone else to fake and free for you to write. It is your unfair advantage, and most people from small towns throw it in the bin trying to sound like somebody else.

Your accent is not the thing to lose. It is the thing to write in.

The outsider sees what the insider stopped noticing

There is a second advantage to arriving from outside, and it is quieter. The insider stops seeing the world because he has never left it. The outsider notices everything, because none of it is background noise to him yet. That noticing is the raw material of every good scene. A writer who grew up watching a place from a slight distance, half belonging and half apart, is a writer who was training in observation the whole time without knowing it.

Use it. When you finally get near the industry, do not rush to blend in. The instinct to camouflage will cost you the exact perspective that makes you worth listening to. The point of crossing the distance from your town was never to become indistinguishable from the people who never had to cross it. It was to bring them something they could not see for themselves.

Protect it, and start small

Two practical notes before you go and write. First, when you finish a script drawn from your own place and people, protect it before you show it, so your authorship has a record. That process is straightforward in India through the Screenwriters Association, and I walked through it in how to register a screenplay in India. Small-town writers sometimes skip this out of shyness, as if their work is not important enough to protect. It is. Protect it anyway.

Second, start at a scale you can actually finish. Do not open with the sprawling epic about your entire community. Write one scene, one short, one contained story from the world you know, all the way to the end. Craft sites like Writer's Digest and The Script Lab are full of free instruction for the mechanics, and if you want my own method for getting from blank page to finished script, it is here: how to write a screenplay.

The town gave you a fee to pay and a story nobody else owns. Pay the fee. Write the story. Somewhere out there is a person who has never heard of your town and will still recognise their own life in it, because you were honest enough to write yours.

#screenwriting #career #small-town #identity
Wr. Sarkhedi
Screenwriter · Ahmedabad

Bhavik Sarkhedi wrote 21 books and 2,000+ articles before he wrote for the screen. Six registered screenplays, one produced short. He writes here about the craft, the philosophy, and the stubborn human part of the work that machines keep failing to copy. Write to him.