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A story about The Talkative Man, a recurring character in several short stories. Some hunters bring a dead tiger into town, and The Talkative Man tells a story to some children. When he was a fertilizer salesman, he stayed in a tiny village overnight in their train station. He left the door cracked because it got too hot to sleep.
Ramu is a young boy born into a poor family, living with his parents and two siblings in a hill station. His parents hardly make ends meet; mother working as a fruit- and vegetable-seller, and father running errands in and around the village, often as a help to the visiting tourists.
[2] 2011: Na D'Souza: Total Contribution to Children's Literature [3] 2012: Palakala Sitaram Bhatta: Mulugade Oorige Bandavaru: Novelette: 2013: H.S. Venkateshmurthy: Total Contribution to Children's Literature [4] 2014: Anand V. Patil: Total Contribution to Children's Literature [5] 2015: T. S. Nagaraja Shetty: Total Contribution to Children's ...
Balamangalam was first published in 1980. [1] The publisher was Mangalam Publications (India) Private Limited. [1] The fortnightly magazine featured, along with the comic strips, children's stories, rhymes and puzzles. Its target audience was children. [1] The headquarters of the magazine was in Kottayam. [1]
Panje Mangesh Rao (1874–1937) was an Indian writer and poet who wrote short stories, essays, poems and children's rhymes in Kannada. He is known as 'kavishishya'. He is known as 'kavishishya'. He wrote Huthariya haadu, Naagara haave, Koti chennaya, Gudugudu Gummata Devaru, Maathaado raamappa.
Jayant Kaikini (born 24 January 1955) [1] is a poet, short story writer, playwright, columnist in Kannada and a lyricist and script writer in Kannada cinema.He has published seven short story collections, six poetry collections, four essay collections and three plays so far.
Tunturu is a major Kannada bi-monthly children's magazine published in Karnataka, India, with its headquarters in Manipal, Karnataka. [4] [5] [6] [7] [8]For the past ...
Hayavadana [1] (meaning: Horse face) is a 1971 Indian Kannada language two-act play written by Girish Karnad. [2] [3] The plot is based on Br̥hatkathā and Thomas Mann's retelling of Transposed Heads. [4] Its twin play is Nagamandala (1988). [5] Hayavadana presents the story of two friends Devdutta and Kapila; and their love interest Padmini. [6]