N. S. MADHAVAN-
CONTEMPORARY MALAYALAM NOVELIST
N. S. Madhavan is one of the most powerful voices in contemporary Malayalam fiction. A short fiction writer, novelist, football columnist and a travel writer, Madhavan enjoys a wide readership in Malayalam. Madhavan was born in the port city of Kochi (old name Cochin) in 1948. He was schooled in his native place at Sree Rama Varma High School. He graduated in economics from Maharajas College, Ernakulam. Later he moved to Thiruvananthapuram to do his masters at the Department of Economics, University of Kerala. It was during this period he started writing. 'Sisu', a short story that won him the first prize in a contest organized by a Malayalam literary magazine, Mathrubhumi, in 1970, was his first published work. He was born in Ernakulam, Kerala, in 1948. He once confessed that he enjoyed a 'happy childhood', opposite of Hemingway's prescription for a good writer. He studied at Sree Rama Varma High School, a government school, teeming with three thousand and odd students. Though the school ran like a factory with morning and evening shifts, it never lowered the bar as far as teaching Malayalam went.
The decade of the 80's saw him write nothing and he
later said he was slowly losing touch with his mother tongue. In 1988 his job
took him back to Kerala. This helped him to reclaim his language. Within two
years, in 1990, he published a short story, Higuita , about the
quixotic and eponymous goalkeeper of Columbia's World Cup team. Madhavan's
reentry was welcomed with critical and-much to his surprise--popular acclaim. Higuita
was followed by Vanmarangal Veezhumpol (When Big Trees Fall),
which forms the kernel of the movie KAAYA THARAN. "More than
imagination," Madhavan once said in an interview, "sometimes pollen
flying about from contemporary events fertilise minds." After the Kerala
spell, there were no more pauses in his writing. Madhavan has published five
collections of short stories since then. In 2003, his first novel, Lanthanbatheriyile
Luthiniyakal (Litanies of Dutch Battery) was published. Though his stories
in translation are not anthologized, his individual stories have appeared in Katha
Prize Series, The Little Magazine etc. Some links to Madhavan's
stories, translated to English, are given below: Stories
:-Chulaimedile Savangal' (Corpses of Chulaimed),
'Higuita', 'Thiruth' (Blue Pencil), 'Paryaya Kathakal'(Stories about Names),
'Nilavili' (The Cry)Novel 'Lanthan
Batheriyile Luthiniyakal' (Litanies of Dutch Battery)
Madhavan was born in the port city of Cochin where he attended the Sree
Rama Varma HigSchool,. After graduating in economics fromMaharajas
College,Ernakulam he moved to Thiruvananthapuram
to study for his masters at the Department of Economics, University of Kerala.
During this period he began writing, and in 1970 won the top prize for his
first published short story 'Sisu', in a contest organized by the Malayalam
literary magazine Mathrubhumi . In 1975,
Madhavan joined the Indian Administrative Service where he was seconded to the Bihar cadre. His civil service career followed
the usual path of initially administering sub-districts and districts, then
jobs in the state and union secretariats followed by the running departments
and corporations.In the 1980s, Madhavan went through a decade-long period of
writers block , until the release of his
story 'Higuita' in 1990. In this work, Madhavan models his protagonist, priest
Father Geevarghese, on Higuita, the 1990 FIFA World Cup goalkeeper for
Columbia. Higuita's unconventional playing style whereby he would often abandon
his goal and try to score goals, occupies the priest's imagination. Likewise,
he temporarily abandons his cassock and saves a tribal girl Lucie from the
clutches of the trafficker Jabbar. The short story was adjudged the best in
hundread years of Malayalam literature.
Since then he has published four collections of stories, a novel and one
collection of plays. Madhavan's works of short fiction are: Madhavan's
contribution to the short story genre, which is dying in most parts of the
world, is reckoned by critics to be unique and noteworthy. As a short-fiction
writer, his art gives importance to minute details and exemplifies the manifest
skill and compact craft that writing short fiction demands. In Madhavan's works
the subtle connections of criss-crossing dialogs and interlacing plots
ultimately reveal an integrated narrative continuum.
After thirty-three years as a writer, Madhavan published his debut novel in
2003 as Lanthan Batheriyile Luthiniyakal, translated as Litanies of the Dutch
Battery in 2010. He
has been chosen for the prestigious Padmaprabha Literary Prize. The award
consisting of a cash prize of Rs.55,000 and a citation is in recognition of Mr.
Madhavan's literary contributions which had transformed and enriched Malayalam
literature with their extraordinary sense of history and social sensitivity,
M.P. Veerendrakumar, chairman of Padmaprabha Trust which has instituted the
award, announced here on Monday. The award is in memory of Mr. Veerendrakumar's
father, the late Padmaprabha, who was a leading planter and a socialist in
Wayanad. Mr. Madhavan, a 1975 batch IAS officer, has been chosen for the
coveted award by a committee headed by M. Mukundan, and consisting of
Vijayalakshmi and Santhosh Echikkanam.
Mr. Madhavan's writings explore deep undercurrents that move the
human mind, and his writing style jells with the intense emotions portrayed,
the award-committee said in its assessment of his writings. Some of his novels
have their roots in history – ‘Shurakan' (Barber) is written against the
background of the U.S.- occupied Iraq; ‘Sarmishta' and ‘Mumbai' discuss power
and sexuality, and ‘Nalam Lokam' (Fourth World) deals with the decline of the Soviet
Union) while ‘Vanmaragal veezhumbol,' ‘Thiruthu,' and ‘Nilavili' have the
unmistakable flavour of contemporary reality .
Prof. John Kurakar
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