Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
in 1724, Meitei King Pamheiba, also known as Gharib Nawaz, having converted from Sanamahism to Hinduism by Guru Gopaldas, composed his version of the Parikshit, a Meitei-language version of an episode he found appealing from the Hindu epic Mahabharata.
Cheerharan (Nepali: चीरहरण) is a 2016 Nepali mythological novel by Neelam Karki Niharika. It was published by Sangri-La Books and is the ninth book of the author. The book won the Padmashree Sahitya Puraskar for the same year. [1] The novel is a retelling of the Mahabharata epic. It shows the pain suffered by women in the political ...
Dhritarashtra (Nepali: धृतराष्ट्र) is a poetry book by Ghanshyam Kandel. It was published in 2016 by Airawati Prakashan. [1] It is a short epic in verse and retells the story of the Mahabharat through the eyes of the blind king of Hastinapur, Dhritarashtra. It won the prestigious Madan Puraskar, 2073 B.S. [2] [3]
English Name English Translator Date of translation publication Original Name Original Writer Date of original publication Type Langada's Friend: Jayaraj Acharya and Don Messerschmidt: 2022: Langadako Sathi: Lain Singh Bangdel: 1951: Novel Black Sun: Saroj Kumar Shakya: 1979: Bharat Jangam: Novel The Wake of the White Tiger: Greta Rana: 1984 ...
Madhabi (Nepali: माधवी) is a 1983 Nepali mythological novel by Madan Mani Dixit. [1] It was published on 13 April 1983 by Sajha Prakashan, and won the Madan Puraskar (2039 BS) for the same year. [2] [3] It is a retelling of the story of Madhabi and Gallav from Mahabharata. Written in a grandiose setting, the novel depicts the economic ...
It is a critical analysis of the Mahabharata. The book was written in Marathi originally and was translated in English by W. Norman Brown. [2] It was translated into Nepali by Sujit Mainali and was published in October 2020 by Kathmandu-based publishing house Book Hill. [3]
Yojangandha (Nepali: योजनगन्धा) is a Nepali novel by Binod Prasad Dhital. [1] It was published in 1995 by Sajha Prakashan. The book is based on a character from Mahabharata, Satyawati. The book won the prestigious Madan Puraskar. [2] It is second book of the author who previously penned a regional novel called Ujyalo Hunu Aghi.
Radha (Nepali: राधा) is a 2005 novel written by Krishna Dharabasi, winner of prestigious Nepali literary award Madan Puraskar. [1] The novel was an adaptation of the ancient Sanskrit epic Mahabharat, giving greater prominence to the character of Radha.