Tamil Novelist Balakumaran

Tamil Short Story Writer, Novelist Balakumaran. As a child, he was highly inspired by his mother, who was a Tamil scholar and a Shiromani in Sanskrit, used verses of Sangam and other ancient literature to motivate him whenever he was emotionally down. This created a deep interest in Tamil literature which made literature his passion. Despite having a poor relationship with his father due to average academic performance especially Maths, he continued his deep interest in literature under his mother support.

His first stories were published in a literary magazine called ‘ka-cha-ta-tha-pa-ra’ and for which he was also a founding member of KaChaTaThaPaRa, a self-anointed militant literary journal that had been launched with a mission to blaze new trails in modernist literature and later in Kumudam.Balakumaran’s first novel — ‘Mercury Pookaal’ was serialized in Saavi and his second ‘Irumbu Kuthirai’ (Iron horse) was serialized in Kalki.

Balakumaran’s works majorly revolved around woman with great empathy. In his stories, women were not merely gendered cardboard cutouts but fully sentient individuals, with bodies, dreams, desires, yearnings and frustrations. This ‘legitimisation’ of female existence earned him succeeding generations of devoted women readers who resonated with the female characters in his fiction. In an interview, he said that during his initial days in Chennai he spent his life amidst such people. This prompted him to develop a liking towards them.

Balakumaran had the habit of experiencing characters by himself when writing a book. For instance, In ‘Udayar’ novel, he had traveled many places where Raja Raja cholan visited in order to bring closeness towards the novel. Also, traveled in trucks to longer distance for his ‘Irumbu Kuthirai’ (Iron horse) novel. In an interview given to The Times of India, he said that after reading Kalki Krishnamurthy’s novel Ponniyin Selvan he wondered why needed to write a fictional account of the Cholas when there was enough to write about the facts there. “The Raja Raja Chola of Kalki was a different person. He hadn’t become the king yet. The Thanjai temple wasn’t even in the picture. I went to the Thanjavur district and visited Pallipadai, dedicated to Panchavan Madevi. She was an anukkiyar, a category that is apart from the queens and concubines. She was a friend of Raja Raja Chola I. If you look at the paintings there, each face is unique. Whoever did it, has worked on it with real faces. I did a lot of research for my novel Gangaikonda Chozhan also. But I felt I did that work, visiting those places as a tourist. Udaiyar, a six-part novel, gave me satisfaction as a writer.”

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