WAVES (Alaikal)

Author: Sundara Ramasamy

One of the most versatile and innovative among contemporary Tamil writers, Sundara Ramaswamy wrote short stories in to phases: between 1951 and 1966, and then, after a long gap, in the 1970s. His early stories, focusing on ordinary people leading ordinary lives, are full of gems by way of characterization – the policeman Seventy-three Forty-seven and the priest of the Nadi Krishna temple in ‘Prasadam’, and Varadan and Joswin in ‘True Love’ remain unforgettable, in spite of their pedestrian lives. In the later stories – ‘Intoxication’ (1973), and ‘Waves’ (1976) – clouded by the aftermath of the Bangladesh war and the Emergency, the plots turn darker and more complex. Surprising us with their odd twists and turns, raising uncomfortable questions, and yet touched by a fine sense of humour and humanity, the stories in this collection belong with the best in the genre.

Published in English PRH
All other languages and territories open.

Other Specification

Pages:200

Price:850

Published on: 2020

Subject: Literature

Category: Diary / Memoir

THE TAMARIND TREE (Oru Puliyamarathin Kathai)

Author: Sundara Ramasamy

Sundara Ramaswamy’s modern classic, translated from Tamil, is a simply stunning reflection about shared histories, loss, an affinity for nature, and a near-mythic center of life in a town in India. While it lived, the tamarind tree stood at the crossroads of a small town in southern India. For more than fifty years it was a benevolent observer, offering shade without discrimination. It bore witness to laughter and tears, to tragedy and simple pleasures, and to the history of the town itself as it transformed from the old ways of bullock-led carts to a bustling community of social, political, economic, and ecological change. And for Damodara Asan, an enigmatic philosopher, memory keeper, and master storyteller, the tamarind tree―and everything it inspired―was an endless source of tales that enthralled generations. Unfolding through the bittersweet remembrances of an unnamed narrator who was once beguiled by Asan, The Tamarind Tree is a beautiful and universal story about transition, the compromises of progress, and a long-gone though undying symbol of indestructible dignity, culture, and life. Published in English* (PRH), Hebrew (Hakibbutz Hameuchad) Malayalam (SPCS Publication), Kannada (Lankesh Prakashana), Telugu (Hyderabad Trust), Hindi (HarperCollins) and Slovenian (Sodobnost International).

*International English edition to published by Amazon crossing in 2022. All other languages and territories open.

Other Specification

Pages:207

Price:250

Published on: 2020

Subject: Literature

Category: Diary / Memoir

JJ: SOME JOTTINGS (J.J. Sila Kurippukal)

Author: Sundara Ramasamy

The undisputed classic of modern Tamil fiction, a triumph of sharp wit and scathing satire Joseph James – or JJ is dead. A famously outspoken figure in Malayalam literature, his death is particularly mourned by Balu, a Tamil writer who endeavours to preserve the luminary’s legacy by penning a biography of JJ. For this, Balu must immerse himself in the politicized and divisive Malayalam literary world, where JJ has made quite a few enemies. And as this enthralling novel of ideas unfolds, Balu discovers that he might have bitten off more than he can chew.

Published in English (PRH). All other languages and territories open.

Other Specification

Pages: 190

Price: 695

Published on: 1 January 1996

Subject: Literature

Category: Diary / Memoir

CHILDREN, WOMEN, MEN (Novel)(Kuzhanthaigal, Pengal, Aangal)

Author: Sundara Ramasamy

Winner of the Crossword Indian language Translation award 2014.
This ambitious novel, teeming with characters, focuses on the family of Srinivasa Aiyar or SRS, who moves from his ancestral house in Alapuzhai, in Kerala, to the more modern Kottayam, before returning to Tamil Nadu, to his wife Lakshmi's home in Nagercoil. Set in the late 1930s and reflecting the political and social turmoil of the pre-war years, it chronicles the psychological conflict between SRS and his nine-year-old son, Balu; the moral struggle of a young widow, Anandam, as she considers remarriage; and the political journey of Sridaran, who chooses to break off his studies in England in order to join nationalist activities at home.
Told from multiple perspectives, this intricately woven narrative will stand the test of time as one of the landmarks of Indian modernism.
Deccan Herald, Bangalore, 23 June 2013

Published in English* (Penguin). All other languages and territories open.

Other Specification

Pages:552

Price:250

Published on: 2020

Subject: Literature

Category: Diary / Memoir