Ramesh Menon (writer)

Ramesh Menon (born 20 September 1951) is an Indian author of several literary renderings in modern English prose of classical works from the ancient Hindu tradition.

Ramesh Menon
Born (1951-09-20) September 20, 1951
New Delhi
OccupationWriter
Notable worksThe Ramayana: A Modern Retelling of the Great Indian Epic

The Mahabharata: A Modern Rendering (2 volumes)

Krishna: Life and Song of the Blue God

Siva: The Siva Purana Retold

Devi: The Devi Bhagavatam Retold

Bhagavata Purana (2 volumes)

Srimad Bhagavad-Gita

The Complete Mahabharata (12 volumes)

His books include The Ramayana: A Modern Retelling of the Great Indian Epic (Farrar, Straus & Giroux and HarperCollins India); The Mahabharata: A Modern Rendering (2 volumes), Krishna: Life and Song of the Blue God, Siva: The Siva Purana Retold, Devi: The Devi Bhagavatam Retold, the Bhagavata Purana (2 volumes), a new translation of the Bhagavad-Gita, and a 12 volume retelling of The Complete Mahabharata (as writer and series editor) - all Rupa Publications.

All his main books, apart from the latest Complete Mahabharata series (finished in September 2017), have gone into many reprints in India.

Biography

Born in New Delhi, Menon studied at St Xavier's High School and St Stephen's College, where he read History Honours (1968–69) and then Philosophy Honours (1969–70), but left college without taking a degree. Reading the Bhagavad-Gita at this time was a life-changing experience for him. It was the seed from which all his later work emerged.

He developed an informal guru-sishya relationship with the great Malayalam novelist OV Vijayan, and translated two of his master's novels into English: The Infinity of Grace[1] (Penguin) and Madhuram Gayathi (yet to be published by Vijayan's estate after his demise in 2005).

Menon has lived and worked in Delhi, Hong Kong, Bengaluru, Jakarta, Tiruvananthapuram, Kodaikanal and Chennai.

Ramesh Menon

Critical Response

In a starred review, Kirkus Reviews described his Ramayana as 'A masterpiece made new for a generation of readers who ought to be very grateful indeed to Menon'.[2]

British theatre director Peter Brook called the book 'A beautiful new rendering of an inexhaustible theme'.[3]

His 2 volume rendering of the Mahabharata is his most read and reviewed book.

gollark: It'll use switchable UTFs encoded in floats for now with a dedicated float encoding later.
gollark: Bees can't factor numbers thus no.
gollark: Besides, that would break the thing where you can choose which UTF to use individually per character.
gollark: u64? This is not a float thus no.
gollark: The floats won't be for strings but individual codepoints (well, as a few bytes) so they are numbers and not not numbers.

References

  1. results, search (1996-02-01). Infinity of Grace. Translated by Menon, Ramesh (2nd ed.). New Delhi; New York, N.Y.: Penguin Books India. ISBN 9780140260076.
  2. THE RAMAYANA by Ramesh Menon | Kirkus Reviews.
  3. "The Ramayana | Ramesh Menon | Macmillan". US Macmillan. Retrieved 2018-06-27.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.