C. V. Balakrishnan

C. V. Balakrishnan

C. V. Balakrishnan
Born 1952
Payyannur, Kerala, India
Occupation Writer, teacher, freelance journalist
Language Malayalam
Nationality Indian
Ethnicity Malayali
Genre Novel, short story, essay, screenplay
Notable works Ayussinte Pusthakam, Disha, Atmavinu Sariyennu Thonnunna Karyangal
Notable awards Kerala Sahitya Akademi Award

C. V. Balakrishnan (born 1952) is a Malayalam-language novelist, short-story writer, essayist and scenarist from the south Indian state of Kerala. His novels and short stories encompass the emotional issues related to mass culture, sexual politics, fate of the marginalised and institutionalised religions. An author of more than 40 literary works along with a few film scripts and film criticisms, his best known work is the novel Ayussinte Pusthakam (Book of Life). He received the Kerala Sahitya Akademi Award in 2000 for the novel Atmavinu Sariyennu Thonnunna Karyangal.[1]

Biography

Balakrishnan was born in Payyannur, Kannur district, Kerala. After completing his school education, he took training in teaching and worked in various schools before shifting to Calcutta in 1979 where he worked as a freelance journalist. It was in Calcutta he began writing Ayussinte Pusthakam.

Balakrishnan is married to Pathmavathi and has two children: Nandan and Nayana. He resides in Kalikkadavu, Kasaragod district, Kerala.

Ayussinte Pusthakam

Main article: Ayussinte Pusthakam

Ayussinte Pusthakam is considered one of the major works in the post-modernist Malayalam literature. Balakrishnan began writing this novel when he moved to Calcutta in late-1970s. An old edition of the Bible at St. Paul's Cathedral in Calcutta triggered the book in him. It took him three years to complete the novel. Says the author: "All the characters and villages of Christian settlers were in my mind long before I began thinking about writing Ayussinte Pusthakam. The characters are based on people I met during my course as a school teacher in a village in Kasaragod. I wrote Ayussinte Pusthakam at a time when I was going through an emotionally difficult period; my relation with my father was strained and I was feeling very lonely. Ayussinte Pusthakam is about loneliness.” The book is also about sin and sadness, written in a style and language that have been judiciously borrowed from The Bible."[2]

Bibliography

Novels

Novellas

Short story collections

Others

Films

Awards

2014:{muttathu varki award}

References