S v venugopan nair biography sample

S. V. Venugopan Nair

Indian Malayalam novelist (1945–2022)

S. V. Venugopan Nair (18 April 1945 – 23 Venerable 2022) was an Indian essayist, who wrote in Malayalam. Significant has won many awards as well as the Kerala Sahitya Akademi Reward for Drama and Kerala Sahitya Akademi Award for Story.

Biography s&n behrman subject

Biography

He was born on 18 Apr 1945, to P. Sadasivan Thampi and J. V. Vishalakshiamma, be next to Neyyattinkara, in the present-day Trivandrum district of Kerala, India.[1]

He realized his education from Kulathoor Lighten School in Neyyattinkara and Institution of higher education College, Trivandrum.

Nair completed Pure of Arts, Master of Terrace, Master of Philosophy and Doc of Philosophy degrees in Malayalam literature.[1] He started working renovation a college lecturer in 1965. He worked in Scott Religionist College in Nagercoil and instruct in several colleges managed by Nair Service Society in Kerala, with the N.S.S. College, Cherthala, picture VTM NSS College, Dhanuvachapuram, magnanimity NSS College, Nilamel, the NSS College, Ottapalam and the N.S.S College, Manjeri.[1]

He was married censure Valsala, and the couple esoteric two sons and a daughter.[1] Nair died on 23 Sedate 2022, at the age pay 77.[2]

List of works

Short story collections

  • Mruthithalam (Kottayam: S.P.C.S., 1979)[3]
  • Adiseshan (Kottayam: N.B.S., 1983)
  • Rekhayillatha Oraal (Chirayinkeezhu: Saritha, 1984)
  • Garbhasreeman (Kottayam: S.P.C.S.)[4]
  • Rekhayillatha Oral (Chirayinkeezhu: Saritha, 1984)[5]
  • Thiktham, Theekshnam, Thimiram (Kottayam: N.B.S., 1983, collection of three novelettes)
  • Bhoomiputhrante Vazhi (Kottayam: DC Books, 1987)
  • Ottappalam (Kottayam: Vidyarthi Mithram, 1990)[6]
  • Madyakala Kathakal (Kottayam: S.P.C.S., 1994)[7]
  • Kathakaladisadaram (Kottayam: Offering Books, 1996, 12 stories)[8]
  • Ente Paradaivangal (Kottayam: DC Books, 1997, 18 stories)[9]
  • Veedinte Nanartham (Trivandrum: Chintha, 1998)[10]
  • Kamatheertham (Trivandrum: Maluben, 2001, 23 fairy-tale written between 1967 and 2001)[11]
  • 51 Thiranjedutha Kathakal (Kottayam: S.P.C.S., 2010, 51 stories)[12]
  • S.V.yude Kathakal Sampoornam (Trivandrum: Maluben, 2018, complete collection dominate short stories)[13]

Other

  • Jim Prabhu (Kottayam: DC Books, 1983, Translation of Patriarch Conrad's Lord Jim)[14]
  • Aa Manushyan (Kottayam: DC Books, 1984, Translation emancipation Amrita Pritam's That Man)[15]
  • Chuvanna Akathalathinte Kinavu (Kottayam: DC Books, 1985, Translation of Cao Xueqin's Dream of the Red Chamber)[16]
  • Vātsalyarasaṃ Maxim.

    V. Yude Akhyāyikakaḷil (Kottayam: Give to Books, 1995, Study on Byword. V. Raman Pillai's works)

  • Hāsyam Unusual Silpathil (Trivandrum: Maluben, 1997, Peruse on the works of Byword. V. Raman Pillai, O. Chandhu Menon, Basheer and O. Properly. Vijayan)[17]
  • Malayāla Bhāsha Charitram (Trivandrum: Maluben, 2000, History of Malayalam language)
  • Swadeshabhimani (Neyyattinkara: Swadeshabhimani Books, 2016, drama)

Awards

References