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Arundhati Roy (born 1961), Indian author best known for her novel The God of Small Things (1997), which won the Booker Prize for Fiction in 1997 and became the best-selling book by a non-expatriate Indian author; Varsha Adalja (born 1940), Gujarati novelist, playwright; Smita Agarwal (born 1958), poet, educator; Vinita Agrawal (born 1965), poet ...
Acchamamba studied Telugu, English and Hindi classics under her brother's guidance and became knowledgeable in literature and women's issues. She wrote several biographies of Telugu and British women, which laid path for future historians. Her stories reflect the social conditions of her times and women's issues.
Joopaka Subhadra (also Jupaka and Jūpāka; born 1962) [1] is a Telugu Dalit activist, poet and writer. She writes poems and short stories that shed light on the lives of Dalits, specifically Dalit women. [2] She is currently working at the Andhra Pradesh Secretariat. [3] [4]
Title of book Remarks 1641 Banarasidas: Ardhakathānaka: Braj Bhasha 1876 Rassundari Devi: Aamar Jiban: Bengali 1931 Bhagat Singh: Why I Am An Atheist: 1933 Narmad: Mari Hakikat: Gujarati 1935 B. R. Ambedkar: Waiting for a Visa: The book is used as a textbook in Columbia University. [1] 1936 Jawaharlal Nehru: An Autobiography: 1940 Mohandas ...
Itlu, Mee Vidheyudu (Short stories) 1992 Malathi Chendur: Hrudaya Netri (Novel) 1993 Madhuranthakam Rajaram: Madhuranthakam Rajaram Kathalu (Short stories) 1994 Gunturu Seshendra Sharma: Kala Rekha (Criticism) 1995 Kalipatnam Ramarao: Yajnam To Tommidi (Short stories) 1996 Kethu Viswanatha Reddy: Kethu Viswanatha Reddy Kathalu (Short stories) 1997
She later in 1991 joined Asmita Resource Centre for Women, a Telangana-based NGO which addresses women's issues, as its President and presently serving as the Chairman of the organization. She is also the member of the publication, Vamtinti Masi (Soot from the Kitchen), an editorial of Asimita Organization, which is an active member of Telugu ...
Veyi Padagalu (pronunciation: veɪjɪ pədəgɑlʊ, English: "A Thousand Hoods") is an epic Telugu novel written by Viswanatha Satyanarayana. It is a critically acclaimed work of 20th century Telugu literature and has been called "a novel of Tolstoyan scope". [1] The novel has been translated into several other Indian languages.
This is a non-diffusing subcategory of Category:Telugu writers. It includes writers that can also be found in the parent category, or in diffusing subcategories of the parent. Pages in category "Telugu women writers"