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Kumudam is a Tamil weekly magazine published in Chennai, India.It was founded in 1948 by S.A.P. Annamalai, and his close friend and confidant P.V. Parthasarathy. [1] Now the magazine is published under the Kumudam Group, which also publishes other Tamil magazines including Kumudam Reporter, Kumudam Snehidi, Kumudam Bhakti, Kumudam Jothidam, Kumudam Theeranadhi.
The first story was published in Kumudam magazine in 1963. The stories have been in print for over four decades and many of them have been made into stage plays and Television shows. [1] [2] [3] A Humour club in Chennai has been named as the "Appusami-Seethapatti Humour Trust" after the protagonists of the series. [4]
Para entered into the Tamil magazine arena through his story ‘Mohenjodaro’, a critical review of the events that happened due to the Ram Janma Bhoomi - Babar Masjid issue, which was published in the magazine ‘Kalki'. He joined the magazine and was its Assistant Editor from 1992 to 2000. He worked in ‘Kumudam’ after that for three years.
Anandalok (আনন্দলোক) – biweekly magazine; Anandamela (আনন্দমেলা) – fortnightly magazine (5th & 20th of every month) Desh magazine (দেশ) – fortnightly magazine (2nd & 17th of every month) Grihshobha (গৃহশোভা) – biweekly women's magazine; Sananda (সানন্দা) – women's ...
He was one of the very few Tamil writers to get a monthly salary from Kumudam for his novels. After leaving Kumudam, he unsuccessfully ran a weekly magazine called Kamalam. His historical novels were published in book form by Vanadhi Padhippagam and became best sellers. As of 2009, many of them still remain in print, four decades after being ...
S. Rangarajan (3 May 1935 – 27 February 2008), better known by his allonym Sujatha, was an Indian author, novelist and screenwriter who wrote in Tamil.He authored over 100 novels, 250 short stories, ten books on science, ten stage plays, and a slim volume of poems.
This devotional book and Bible combination guides you through every page with thoughtful introductions, commentaries, articles, character sketches, and, of course, daily devotions.
Jayakanthan wrote his first short story for a Tamil magazine titled Sowbakiyavathi, [5] which got it published in 1953. Following early success, Jayakanthan started writing for mainstream magazines such as Ananda Vikatan , Kumudam and Dinamani Kadir , who published a number of short-stories particularly in the 1960s.