Jituji
Jituji is a writer shaped by movement — across cities, cultures, and inner lives. Born in Varanasi, he grew up learning early that home is not always a fixed place, but something carried within.
His life has unfolded across India and North America, having lived, studied, worked, and grown in Mumbai, Lucknow, Pune, Ahmedabad, Baroda, Kolkata, Delhi, Bangalore, the Andaman Islands, and later Toronto, Seattle, New York, Boston, and Chicago.
Writing from this constant motion, Jitu explores the fault lines of belonging, ambition, family, and return. His work reflects the tension between outward success and inner alignment, and the quiet reckoning that follows a life spent performing for expectations — professional, cultural, and communal.
With a voice that blends tenderness and clarity, he writes about queerness, inherited roles, love, and the courage it takes to choose peace over momentum. His stories are rooted in lived experience — airports and living rooms, late-night songs, long phone calls home, and the moments when stillness finally feels earned.
When he is not writing, Jituji works at the intersection of technology, strategy, and people. On the page, however, he is most interested in what cannot be measured: presence, grief, joy, love, and the slow, deliberate act of becoming oneself.
This book is part of that becoming and a message to all the gay, immigrant, people of color, people with accent and hope that you can become.