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The novel is a remake of an earlier book, The Landscapes Within (1981). [1] It is set in a post civil-war Nigerian society in a Lagos compound. Dangerous Love follows a young artist named Omovo and the influence that corrupt politics has on his artistry in the ghettos of Lagos in Nigeria after the Civil War. [2]
Dangerous Love may refer to: "Dangerous Love" (song), a 2014 song by Fuse ODG featuring Sean Paul; Dangerous Love, 1996 novel by Ben Okri; Dangerous Love, silent Western; Dangerous Love, starring Elliott Gould "Dangerous Love", Korean song by T-ara from Bunny Style! "Dangerous Love", Japanese rap song by Little from Kick the Can Crew
Pyre (Tamil: பூக்குழி, romanized: Pūkkuḻi, lit. 'flower pot') is a novel by Perumal Murugan that describes a love story within social caste-induced hatred . [ 1 ] It was originally published in Tamil in 2013 and subsequently translated into English by Aniruddhan Vasudevan in 2016. [ 2 ]
Unlike in the two other books of the Kural text, in the Book of Inbam Valluvar falls in line with the established poetic tradition of the Sangam love anthologies in terms of style, diction, and structural unity. [27] According to T. P. Meenakshisundaram, every couplet of the Book of Inbam may be considered a "dramatic monologue of the agam ...
The term Tirukkuṟaḷ is a compound word made of two individual terms, tiru and kuṟaḷ. Tiru is an honorific Tamil term that corresponds to the Sanskrit term sri meaning "holy, sacred, excellent, honorable, and beautiful."
[1] [note 1] Also referred to as Nedunalvadai, [3] it is a blend of a love and war story, highlighting the pains of separation of a queen waiting for her lover to return from the distant war. [4] Authored by Nakkirar , it is the seventh poem in the Pattuppāṭṭu anthology. [ 5 ]
The Iraiyanar Akapporul in its present form is a composite work, containing three distinct texts with different authors. These are sixty nūṟpās which constitute the core of the original Iraiyanar Akapporul, a long prose commentary on the nūṟpās, and a set of poems called the Pāṇṭikkōvai which are embedded within the commentary.
The names, incidentally, have a ringing poignancy: Arokkyam means 'good health', 'well-being'; Savuri is the Tamil version of Xavier. The novel is constructed on two journeys: a pilgrimage of hope at the beginning; a routine trip to the washing pool in drudgery and despair at the end.