The time spent away from cricket felt like a "torture" but India opener Prithvi Shaw believes he returned hungrier after serving a doping ban last year.
Shaw was handed a back-dated eight-month suspension by the Indian cricket board for the doping violation after the opener said he had inadvertently ingested a prohibited substance.
The 20-year-old, who smashed a century on his test debut against West Indies in 2018, returned to international cricket during the tour of New Zealand earlier this year.
"It was a mistake. And the period away from cricket was a torture," the Delhi Capitals player told fans of his Indian Premier League (IPL) team in an Instagram Live chat.
"Doubts and questions arise, but I kept the faith and belief... When the ban got over, and I returned to domestic cricket, I was hungrier than before.
"I picked up my bat and realised I hadn't lost my touch at all. If anything, that time off made me a more determined person."
Shaw made his one-day debut in New Zealand even though India were whitewashed in the three-match series.
Like any professional cricketer, Shaw is cooling his heels at home after this year's IPL was indefinitely postponed in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Shaw stressed that patience was key in coping with the lull in the cricket world.
"Mental strength is very important at this time, given that we are all restricted indoors," he said.
"A lot of us don't have patience for things in life, so now is a great time to work on it.
"I've been working out a bit indoors and shadow practising to maintain my fitness levels.
"I've also been helping my father in the kitchen. I can cook eggs quite well, and I'm trying to learn a few new things."
László Krasznahorkai takes home the 2025 Nobel Prize in Literature
Swedish Academy praises his dark, intense storytelling and visionary work
Known for Satantango, The Melancholy of Resistance and sprawling sentences
Prize includes £820,000 (₹1.03 crore) and Stockholm ceremony in December
Joins past laureates like Han Kang, Annie Ernaux, and Bob Dylan
Okay, so this happened. László Krasznahorkai, yes, the Hungarian novelist who makes reading feel almost like a slow, hypnotic descent into some bleak, hypnotic place, just won the Nobel Prize in Literature 2025. The Swedish Academy made the announcement on Thursday, describing his work as “compelling and visionary” and throwing in a line about “apocalyptic terror” fitting, honestly, given the his obsession with collapse, decay, chaos.
Hungarian writer Krasznahorkai wins Nobel Prize in Literature as critics hail his daring, unsettling literary vision Getty Images
Why Krasznahorkai got the Nobel Prize in Literature
He was born 1954, Gyula, Hungary. Tiny town, right on the Romanian border. Quiet. Nothing much happening there. Maybe that’s why he ended up staring at life so much, thinking too hard. In 1985, he wroteSatantango, twelve chapters, twelve long paragraphs. It’s heavy, but also brilliant.
You read it and your brain sort of melts a little but in the best possible way. The Swedish Academy called him a Central European epic writer, in the tradition of Kafka and Thomas Bernhard.
Nobel Prize in Literature 2025 goes to Hungarian author Krasznahorkai known for bleak and intense writing styleGetty Images
His writing life: chaos, darkness, a bit of play
Krasznahorkai is not the type to do interviews. He’s private and rarely smiles in photos. People who have read his work, including Hari Kunzru and a few others, describe him as “bleak but funny.” Strange mix, but it fits his style.
His novels The Melancholy of Resistance, War and War, Seiobo There Below are not casual reads. They are intense, layered, almost architectural in their construction. Then there’s Herscht 07769, his new book. Dark, set in Germany, full of social unrest, and the story is threaded with references to Johann Sebastian Bach’s music, giving it a haunting, atmospheric backdrop.
Krasznahorkai has also had a long partnership with director Béla Tarr. Satantango was adapted into a seven-hour film, and it worked.
Readers around the world react to Krasznahorkai winning the Nobel Prize in LiteratureGetty Images
Reactions to the Nobel
Writers are reacting. Some saying “finally.” Some saying “he’s too intense for most people.” Some saying “I can’t imagine anyone else this year.” Krasznahorkai just keeps writing, keeps being him. Once, when someone asked him about his crazy long sentences, he shrugged and said something like: letters first, then words, then sentences, then longer sentences, and so on. He has spent decades just trying to make something beautiful out of chaos. That’s him, really.
The Nobel includes a medal, a diploma, and £820,000 (₹1.03 crore), with the ceremony taking place in Stockholm on 10 December. And now he’s standing alongside some huge names like Bob Dylan, Olga Tokarczuk, Han Kang. He’s not like them though. He’s a darker, twistier, strange, human. You read him and you feel something. Maybe unease. Maybe awe. Maybe both.
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