Nawazuddin Siddiqui’s autobiography ‘An Ordinary Life’ hit stands and the headlines for all wrong reasons. Last night Nawazuddin Siddiqui took to twitter to announce that he is withdrawing his memoir and appologised to people whom he may have hurt.
I m apologising 2 every1 who's sentiments r hurt bcz of d chaos around my memoir #AnOrdinaryLife
I hereby regret & decide 2 withdraw my book— Nawazuddin Siddiqui (@Nawazuddin_S) October 30, 2017
The book contained a detailed narration of Nawaz’s affair with his ‘Miss Lovely’ co-star Niharika Singh and had irked the latter. The actress lashed out at Nawaz for unraveling a personal episode without her consent.
Next in line was Nawaz’s first girlfriend Sunita Rajwar, whom he had met while studying at the National School of Drama. In his book, Nawaz reportedly claims Sunita left him for his poor financial status. Disgraced at what he wrote, Sunita took to Facebook to back-answer. “I left you not because of your poor financial condition, but because of your poor thoughts,” she wrote.
After the two back-to-back incidents, Nawaz decided to withdraw his book. (Also Read:Â Nawazuddin withdraws his autobiography amidst allegations)
We contacted Sunita to know her reactions on the same and she said, “It’s way too early to comment…As of now I feel the damage has been done and now it is irreversible.”
By withdrawing the book, did Nawaz not acknowledge the allegations against him, in a way? Would this backfire on his public image?
A bullet that’s fired and words that are spoken, can’t be brought back!
Journalist. Writer. Reader. Enthu cutlet. Mood-swing machine. Day dreamer. Sandwiched between ‘live life fully’ and ‘lose some weight’. Mantra of life: Love and love more.