{"count":17752,"next":"http://admin.kavishala.in/sootradhar/authors/?format=json&page=810","previous":"http://admin.kavishala.in/sootradhar/authors/?format=json&page=808","results":[{"id":15484,"image":"https://kavishalalab.s3.ap-south-1.amazonaws.com/kavishala_logo.png","name":"Natana Kasinathan","bio":"\nNatana Kasinthan is an Indian historian, archaeologist, author and epigraphist who is known for his work on inscriptions of Tamil Nadu. He served as the Director of the Tamil Nadu Archaeology Department, Government of Tamil Nadu. He is credited for reviving the inscriptions relating to early Tamil civilizations.\nRock Art at Mallachandram.\nDate of Early Tamil Epigraphs","raw_bio":"Natana Kasinthan is an Indian historian, archaeologist, author and epigraphist who is known for his work on inscriptions of Tamil Nadu. He served as the Director of the Tamil Nadu Archaeology Department, Government of Tamil Nadu. He is credited for reviving the inscriptions relating to early Tamil civilizations. Rock Art at Mallachandram. Date of Early Tamil Epigraphs","slug":"natana-kasinathan","DOB":null,"DateOfDemise":null,"location":"Unknown","url":"/sootradhar/natana-kasinathan","tags":null,"created":"2023-09-22T12:18:55.671806","is_has_special_post":false,"is_special_author":false,"language":16},{"id":15485,"image":"https://kavishalalab.s3.ap-south-1.amazonaws.com/kavishala_logo.png","name":"P. A. Krishnan","bio":"\nP. A. Krishnan  is an Indian writer who writes in both Tamil and English. He began his career as a teacher of physics and went on to serve many years as an bureaucrat in the Government of India. After a long stint of 30 years, he joined a research organization as the CEO. He later became a Senior Director with a multinational firm.\nHis most famous novels include The Tiger Claw Tree and The Muddy River which were also re-created by him in Tamil as புலிநகக் கொன்றை and கலங்கிய நதி. He has also written an introduction to Western Painting the first volume of which was published by Kalachuvadu under the title மேற்கத்திய ஓவியங்கள். A contributor to several Indian newspapers and literary magazines, several volumes of his essays have also been collated and published, the most notable ones being Agrahaarathil Periyar (அக்கிரகாரத்தில் பெரியார்) and Thirumbichendra Tharunam (திரும்பிச் சென்ற தருணம்).He is one of the Advisories in awards panel of Tamil literary garden organization.\nKrishnan presently lives with his wife Revathi in New Delhi and their only son Siddharth works in Google in California.","raw_bio":"P. A. Krishnan  is an Indian writer who writes in both Tamil and English. He began his career as a teacher of physics and went on to serve many years as an bureaucrat in the Government of India. After a long stint of 30 years, he joined a research organization as the CEO. He later became a Senior Director with a multinational firm. His most famous novels include The Tiger Claw Tree and The Muddy River which were also re-created by him in Tamil as புலிநகக் கொன்றை and கலங்கிய நதி. He has also written an introduction to Western Painting the first volume of which was published by Kalachuvadu under the title மேற்கத்திய ஓவியங்கள். A contributor to several Indian newspapers and literary magazines, several volumes of his essays have also been collated and published, the most notable ones being Agrahaarathil Periyar (அக்கிரகாரத்தில் பெரியார்) and Thirumbichendra Tharunam (திரும்பிச் சென்ற தருணம்).He is one of the Advisories in awards panel of Tamil literary garden organization. Krishnan presently lives with his wife Revathi in New Delhi and their only son Siddharth works in Google in California.","slug":"p-a-krishnan","DOB":null,"DateOfDemise":null,"location":"Unknown","url":"/sootradhar/p-a-krishnan","tags":null,"created":"2023-09-22T12:18:55.697392","is_has_special_post":false,"is_special_author":false,"language":16},{"id":15486,"image":"https://kavishalalab.s3.ap-south-1.amazonaws.com/kavishala_logo.png","name":"Krithika","bio":"\nMathuram Bhoothalingam (pen name Krithika) was a Tamil writer who wrote plays and short stories in Tamil and English.\nKrithika was born as Mathuram in a Kannada-speaking family in Bombay in 1915. At an early age, she moved to Delhi where she spent a considerable part of her life. She was married to Subrahmanya Bhoothalingam, an ICS officer from Delhi. The couple have a daughter, Mina Swaminathan.\nKrithika died in 2009 at the age of 93.","raw_bio":"Mathuram Bhoothalingam (pen name Krithika) was a Tamil writer who wrote plays and short stories in Tamil and English. Krithika was born as Mathuram in a Kannada-speaking family in Bombay in 1915. At an early age, she moved to Delhi where she spent a considerable part of her life. She was married to Subrahmanya Bhoothalingam, an ICS officer from Delhi. The couple have a daughter, Mina Swaminathan. Krithika died in 2009 at the age of 93.","slug":"krithika","DOB":null,"DateOfDemise":null,"location":"Unknown","url":"/sootradhar/krithika","tags":null,"created":"2023-09-22T12:18:55.721314","is_has_special_post":false,"is_special_author":false,"language":16},{"id":15487,"image":"https://kavishalalab.s3.ap-south-1.amazonaws.com/kavishala_logo.png","name":"Rajesh Kumar (writer)","bio":"Rajesh Kumar is the pseudonym of KR Rajagopal, a Tamil author of crime fiction.\nKumar's first published story was in 1968 or 1969, in the college magazine of Government Arts College, Coimbatore, where he earned a degree in botany. He has attributed this to a prank by another student, who used Kumar's name when volunteering to submit a story for the magazine; when his professor refused to allow Kumar to back out, \"the next day\" he \"reluctantly\" submitted \"Vaazhndhu Kaatuvom\", a love story.\nLater that year, he submitted the crime story \"Unnai Vidamaatten\" to a short story contest in Malai Murasu; this was the first story for which he was paid.\nIn 1977, his work began appearing in Kumudam, starting with the short story \"Idhu Nyayama\".","raw_bio":"Rajesh Kumar is the pseudonym of KR Rajagopal, a Tamil author of crime fiction. Kumar's first published story was in 1968 or 1969, in the college magazine of Government Arts College, Coimbatore, where he earned a degree in botany. He has attributed this to a prank by another student, who used Kumar's name when volunteering to submit a story for the magazine; when his professor refused to allow Kumar to back out, \"the next day\" he \"reluctantly\" submitted \"Vaazhndhu Kaatuvom\", a love story. Later that year, he submitted the crime story \"Unnai Vidamaatten\" to a short story contest in Malai Murasu; this was the first story for which he was paid. In 1977, his work began appearing in Kumudam, starting with the short story \"Idhu Nyayama\".","slug":"rajesh-kumar-writer","DOB":null,"DateOfDemise":null,"location":"Unknown","url":"/sootradhar/rajesh-kumar-writer","tags":null,"created":"2023-09-22T12:18:55.736895","is_has_special_post":false,"is_special_author":false,"language":16},{"id":15488,"image":"https://kavishalalab.s3.ap-south-1.amazonaws.com/kavishala_logo.png","name":"C. S. Lakshmi","bio":"\nC. S. Lakshmi (born 1944) is an Indian feminist writer and independent researcher in women's studies from India. She writes under the pseudonym Ambai.\nLakshmi was born in Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu in 1944. She grew up in Mumbai and Bangalore. She obtained her Bachelor of Arts from Bangalore University, Master of Arts from Madras Christian College and her PhD from Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi. She draws great inspiration from her mother who asked her to study in Chennai if it would contribute to a change of any extent in her life. Her dissertation was on American policy towards refugees fleeing Hungary due to the failed revolution of 1956. After completing her education, she worked as a school teacher and college lecturer in Tamil Nadu. She is married to Vishnu Mathur, a film maker, and lives in Mumbai.\nIn 1962, Lakshmi published her first work Nandimalai Charalilae (lit. At Nandi Hills) – written when she was still a teenager. Her first serious work of fiction was the Tamil novel Andhi Maalai (lit. Twilight) which came out in 1966. It received the \"Kalaimagal Narayanaswamy Aiyar\" Prize. She received critical acclaim with the short story Siragukal muriyum (lit. Wings will be broken) (1967) published in the literary magazine Kanaiyazhi. This story was later published in book form as a part of short story collection under the same name in 1976. The same year she was awarded a two-year fellowship to study the work of Tamil women writers. The research work was published as The Face behind the mask (Advent Books) in 1984. In 1988, her second Tamil short story collection titled Veetin mulaiyil oru samaiyalarai (lit. A kitchen in the corner of the house) was published. This established her reputation as a major short story writer. Her work is characterised by her feminism, an eye for detail, and a sense of irony. Some of her works – A Purple Sea (1992) and In A Forest, A Deer (2006) – have been translated English by Lakshmi Holmström. In 2006, she (along with Lakshmi Holmström) won the Vodafone Crossword Book Award (in the Indian language fiction translation category) for In a Forest, A Deer. For her contributions to Tamil literature, she received the 2008 Iyal Virudhu (Lifetime Achievement Award) awarded by the Canada-based Tamil Literary Garden. In 2021, she won the Sahitya Akademi Award, India's highest literary honor, for her collection of short stories Civappuk Kazuttu Tan Oru Paccaip Parava.","raw_bio":"C. S. Lakshmi (born 1944) is an Indian feminist writer and independent researcher in women's studies from India. She writes under the pseudonym Ambai. Lakshmi was born in Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu in 1944. She grew up in Mumbai and Bangalore. She obtained her Bachelor of Arts from Bangalore University, Master of Arts from Madras Christian College and her PhD from Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi. She draws great inspiration from her mother who asked her to study in Chennai if it would contribute to a change of any extent in her life. Her dissertation was on American policy towards refugees fleeing Hungary due to the failed revolution of 1956. After completing her education, she worked as a school teacher and college lecturer in Tamil Nadu. She is married to Vishnu Mathur, a film maker, and lives in Mumbai. In 1962, Lakshmi published her first work Nandimalai Charalilae (lit. At Nandi Hills) – written when she was still a teenager. Her first serious work of fiction was the Tamil novel Andhi Maalai (lit. Twilight) which came out in 1966. It received the \"Kalaimagal Narayanaswamy Aiyar\" Prize. She received critical acclaim with the short story Siragukal muriyum (lit. Wings will be broken) (1967) published in the literary magazine Kanaiyazhi. This story was later published in book form as a part of short story collection under the same name in 1976. The same year she was awarded a two-year fellowship to study the work of Tamil women writers. The research work was published as The Face behind the mask (Advent Books) in 1984. In 1988, her second Tamil short story collection titled Veetin mulaiyil oru samaiyalarai (lit. A kitchen in the corner of the house) was published. This established her reputation as a major short story writer. Her work is characterised by her feminism, an eye for detail, and a sense of irony. Some of her works – A Purple Sea (1992) and In A Forest, A Deer (2006) – have been translated English by Lakshmi Holmström. In 2006, she (along with Lakshmi Holmström) won the Vodafone Crossword Book Award (in the Indian language fiction translation category) for In a Forest, A Deer. For her contributions to Tamil literature, she received the 2008 Iyal Virudhu (Lifetime Achievement Award) awarded by the Canada-based Tamil Literary Garden. In 2021, she won the Sahitya Akademi Award, India's highest literary honor, for her collection of short stories Civappuk Kazuttu Tan Oru Paccaip Parava.","slug":"c-s-lakshmi","DOB":null,"DateOfDemise":null,"location":"Unknown","url":"/sootradhar/c-s-lakshmi","tags":null,"created":"2023-09-22T12:18:55.775282","is_has_special_post":false,"is_special_author":false,"language":16},{"id":15489,"image":"https://kavishalalab.s3.ap-south-1.amazonaws.com/kavishala_logo.png","name":"Shalin Maria Lawrence","bio":"\nShalin Mariya Lawrence (born 25 August 1983) is an author, columnist, Intersectional feminist, ambedkarite, and social activist. She has been active in dalitism, feminism, social activism and literature. She has been giving voice and fighting for various issues like violence against Dalits, injustice towards the natives of Chennai, manual scavenging deaths, social advancement of transgender people, forced displacements of indigenous people of chennai, everyday problems faced by women, and human rights abuses. She has written the books 'Vada chenaikkaari, 'Sandaikkaarigal : aangalai punpaduththum pakkanga', and 'Jensy ean kuraivaaga paadinaar'. She is a renowned activist and writer of Dalit literature in Tamil Nadu.\nShalin Maria Lawrence was born in Patalam, Madras. She is based in Chennai.\nShalin was mentioned as one of the '11 crusaders for gender justice in India' by GroundReport, a digital news platform.","raw_bio":"Shalin Mariya Lawrence (born 25 August 1983) is an author, columnist, Intersectional feminist, ambedkarite, and social activist. She has been active in dalitism, feminism, social activism and literature. She has been giving voice and fighting for various issues like violence against Dalits, injustice towards the natives of Chennai, manual scavenging deaths, social advancement of transgender people, forced displacements of indigenous people of chennai, everyday problems faced by women, and human rights abuses. She has written the books 'Vada chenaikkaari, 'Sandaikkaarigal : aangalai punpaduththum pakkanga', and 'Jensy ean kuraivaaga paadinaar'. She is a renowned activist and writer of Dalit literature in Tamil Nadu. Shalin Maria Lawrence was born in Patalam, Madras. She is based in Chennai. Shalin was mentioned as one of the '11 crusaders for gender justice in India' by GroundReport, a digital news platform.","slug":"shalin-maria-lawrence","DOB":null,"DateOfDemise":null,"location":"Unknown","url":"/sootradhar/shalin-maria-lawrence","tags":null,"created":"2023-09-22T12:18:55.789550","is_has_special_post":false,"is_special_author":false,"language":16},{"id":15490,"image":"https://kavishalalab.s3.ap-south-1.amazonaws.com/kavishala_logo.png","name":"Mallar (poet)","bio":"Mallar (c. 11 to 13th century CE) was a Tamil poet, scholar, and commentator known for his commentary on the Thirukkural. He was among the canon of Ten Medieval Commentators of the Kural text most highly esteemed by modern scholars. His work, however, has been lost along with other four ancient commentators, namely, Dhamatthar, Nacchar, Thirumalaiyar, and Dharumar.","raw_bio":"Mallar (c. 11 to 13th century CE) was a Tamil poet, scholar, and commentator known for his commentary on the Thirukkural. He was among the canon of Ten Medieval Commentators of the Kural text most highly esteemed by modern scholars. His work, however, has been lost along with other four ancient commentators, namely, Dhamatthar, Nacchar, Thirumalaiyar, and Dharumar.","slug":"mallar-poet","DOB":null,"DateOfDemise":null,"location":"Unknown","url":"/sootradhar/mallar-poet","tags":null,"created":"2023-09-22T12:18:55.801034","is_has_special_post":false,"is_special_author":false,"language":16},{"id":15491,"image":"https://kavishalalab.s3.ap-south-1.amazonaws.com/kavishala_logo.png","name":"Manakkudavar","bio":"\nManakkudavar (c. 10th century CE) was a Tamil scholar and commentator known for his commentary on the Tirukkural. His is the earliest of the available commentaries on the Kural text, and hence considered to bear closest semblance with the original work by Valluvar. He was among the canon of Ten Medieval Commentators of the Kural text most highly esteemed by scholars. He was also among the five ancient commentators whose commentaries had been preserved and made available to the Modern era, the others being Pari Perumal, Kaalingar, Paridhi, and Parimelalhagar.\nThe commentary of Manakkudavar remains the second most popular commentary on the Kural text, next only to that of Parimelalhagar.\nLittle is known about Manakkudavar in comparison with other medieval commentators. This is partly due to lack of any introductory texts in his commentary. There is no information about his parents either. Manakkudavar is believed to have been born in Manakkudi, from which he came to be referred to as \"Manakkudiyaar\", and later as \"Manakkudavar\". Since there are several towns in Tamil Nadu bearing the name \"Manakkudi\", it is difficult to pinpoint which of these towns was his home town. It is also said that \"Manakkudi\" is also the name of his clan. He lived around the 10th century CE. He was the oldest of the ten medieval commentators. Manakkudavar's mentioning about several earlier interpretations in various places in his commentary, including his explications to couplets 17 and 389, reveals that there were several earlier commentaries on the Kural literature before his time, which are now completely lost.","raw_bio":"Manakkudavar (c. 10th century CE) was a Tamil scholar and commentator known for his commentary on the Tirukkural. His is the earliest of the available commentaries on the Kural text, and hence considered to bear closest semblance with the original work by Valluvar. He was among the canon of Ten Medieval Commentators of the Kural text most highly esteemed by scholars. He was also among the five ancient commentators whose commentaries had been preserved and made available to the Modern era, the others being Pari Perumal, Kaalingar, Paridhi, and Parimelalhagar. The commentary of Manakkudavar remains the second most popular commentary on the Kural text, next only to that of Parimelalhagar. Little is known about Manakkudavar in comparison with other medieval commentators. This is partly due to lack of any introductory texts in his commentary. There is no information about his parents either. Manakkudavar is believed to have been born in Manakkudi, from which he came to be referred to as \"Manakkudiyaar\", and later as \"Manakkudavar\". Since there are several towns in Tamil Nadu bearing the name \"Manakkudi\", it is difficult to pinpoint which of these towns was his home town. It is also said that \"Manakkudi\" is also the name of his clan. He lived around the 10th century CE. He was the oldest of the ten medieval commentators. Manakkudavar's mentioning about several earlier interpretations in various places in his commentary, including his explications to couplets 17 and 389, reveals that there were several earlier commentaries on the Kural literature before his time, which are now completely lost.","slug":"manakkudavar","DOB":null,"DateOfDemise":null,"location":"Unknown","url":"/sootradhar/manakkudavar","tags":null,"created":"2023-09-22T12:18:55.817178","is_has_special_post":false,"is_special_author":false,"language":16},{"id":15492,"image":"https://kavishalalab.s3.ap-south-1.amazonaws.com/kavishala_logo.png","name":"A. A. Manavalan","bio":"A. A. Manavalan (1937–2018) was a Tamil language Indian scholar. He was awarded Saraswati Samman (2011) for his work Irama Kathaiyum Iramayakalyum (2005), which is a comparative study of Ramayana written in 48 languages including Sanskrit, Pali, Prakrit, Tibetan, Tamil, Old Javanese, Japanese, Telugu, Assamese, Malayalam, Bengali, Kannada, Marathi, Hindi, Odisi, Persian, Malay, Burmese, Maranao, Thai, Laotian and Kashmiri. He was the second person from Tamil Nadu to receive this honour, first was Indira Parthasarathy\nHe earned PhD degree in English literature for his doctoral dissertation Epic Heroism in Milton and Kamban. He translated Poetics of Aristotle into Tamil, a first of its kind in any Indian languages.\nManavalan died on 1 December 2018.\nSelected works by A. A. Manavalan:","raw_bio":"A. A. Manavalan (1937–2018) was a Tamil language Indian scholar. He was awarded Saraswati Samman (2011) for his work Irama Kathaiyum Iramayakalyum (2005), which is a comparative study of Ramayana written in 48 languages including Sanskrit, Pali, Prakrit, Tibetan, Tamil, Old Javanese, Japanese, Telugu, Assamese, Malayalam, Bengali, Kannada, Marathi, Hindi, Odisi, Persian, Malay, Burmese, Maranao, Thai, Laotian and Kashmiri. He was the second person from Tamil Nadu to receive this honour, first was Indira Parthasarathy He earned PhD degree in English literature for his doctoral dissertation Epic Heroism in Milton and Kamban. He translated Poetics of Aristotle into Tamil, a first of its kind in any Indian languages. Manavalan died on 1 December 2018. Selected works by A. A. Manavalan:","slug":"a-a-manavalan","DOB":null,"DateOfDemise":null,"location":"Unknown","url":"/sootradhar/a-a-manavalan","tags":null,"created":"2023-09-22T12:18:55.829146","is_has_special_post":false,"is_special_author":false,"language":16},{"id":15493,"image":"https://kavishalalab.s3.ap-south-1.amazonaws.com/kavishala_logo.png","name":"Meikandadevar","bio":"Meikanda Thevar (c. 11th century CE) was a Hindu poet and expert in Hindu metaphysics and theology.\nMeikandadevar was born Shvetavana Perumal in the town of Venneinallur situated on the Pennar River.\nMeikandadevar was a student of Paranjothi Tampiran. The most popular of his compositions is Sivagnana Bodham, a metaphysical and theological treatise.","raw_bio":"Meikanda Thevar (c. 11th century CE) was a Hindu poet and expert in Hindu metaphysics and theology. Meikandadevar was born Shvetavana Perumal in the town of Venneinallur situated on the Pennar River. Meikandadevar was a student of Paranjothi Tampiran. The most popular of his compositions is Sivagnana Bodham, a metaphysical and theological treatise.","slug":"meikandadevar","DOB":null,"DateOfDemise":null,"location":"Unknown","url":"/sootradhar/meikandadevar","tags":null,"created":"2023-09-22T12:18:55.841401","is_has_special_post":false,"is_special_author":false,"language":16},{"id":15494,"image":"https://kavishalalab.s3.ap-south-1.amazonaws.com/kavishala_logo.png","name":"Mowni","bio":"\nMowni was the pen name of Tamil fiction writer S. Mani Iyer (1907–1985). Born at Semmangudi, Mowni, was one  of  the few writers of Tamil fiction. He had his high school education in Kumbakonam and lived there for fourteen years after marrying.  Then he moved to Chidambaram permanently to look after his family properties. He initially had 5 children. There were 4 boys and 1 girl. Two of his sons died when they were very young. One other son passed on due to an accident. His remaining son lives in USA. His daughter lives near Kumbakonam.\nMowni had a bachelor's degree in Mathematics, but he did not take up  any job. He was very fond of European classical music and he also had very strong exposure to Western literature, and showed deep interest in Indian philosophy. Mowni wrote 24 short stories from around 1934, some of which have been translated into English. Mowni's stories are based on the uncertainties of human life, relationships and their manifestations. His pen name and the titles of his stories were given to him by his mentor. His stories came out in Tamil magazines such as Theni. He was fondly called by pudhumaipithan ( contemporary writer of his age)as \" sirukathaiyin thirumular\". Mowni died in Chidambaram on June 6, 1985.\n","raw_bio":"Mowni was the pen name of Tamil fiction writer S. Mani Iyer (1907–1985). Born at Semmangudi, Mowni, was one  of  the few writers of Tamil fiction. He had his high school education in Kumbakonam and lived there for fourteen years after marrying.  Then he moved to Chidambaram permanently to look after his family properties. He initially had 5 children. There were 4 boys and 1 girl. Two of his sons died when they were very young. One other son passed on due to an accident. His remaining son lives in USA. His daughter lives near Kumbakonam. Mowni had a bachelor's degree in Mathematics, but he did not take up  any job. He was very fond of European classical music and he also had very strong exposure to Western literature, and showed deep interest in Indian philosophy. Mowni wrote 24 short stories from around 1934, some of which have been translated into English. Mowni's stories are based on the uncertainties of human life, relationships and their manifestations. His pen name and the titles of his stories were given to him by his mentor. His stories came out in Tamil magazines such as Theni. He was fondly called by pudhumaipithan ( contemporary writer of his age)as \" sirukathaiyin thirumular\". Mowni died in Chidambaram on June 6, 1985. ","slug":"mowni","DOB":null,"DateOfDemise":null,"location":"Unknown","url":"/sootradhar/mowni","tags":null,"created":"2023-09-22T12:18:55.857358","is_has_special_post":false,"is_special_author":false,"language":16},{"id":15495,"image":"https://kavishalalab.s3.ap-south-1.amazonaws.com/kavishala_logo.png","name":"Raju Murugan","bio":"\nRaju Murugan is a writer, journalist turned filmmaker from Tiruvarur. His works include Vattiyum Muthalum, Ondru and Gypsy, all of which were published in Ananda Vikatan. He made his directorial debut with Cuckoo (2014). His second film, Joker, was awarded the Best Feature Film in Tamil award at the 64th National Film Awards. He worked as an assistant to Lingusamy for 3 years.\n\nThis article about an Indian film director is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.","raw_bio":"Raju Murugan is a writer, journalist turned filmmaker from Tiruvarur. His works include Vattiyum Muthalum, Ondru and Gypsy, all of which were published in Ananda Vikatan. He made his directorial debut with Cuckoo (2014). His second film, Joker, was awarded the Best Feature Film in Tamil award at the 64th National Film Awards. He worked as an assistant to Lingusamy for 3 years.  This article about an Indian film director is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.","slug":"raju-murugan","DOB":null,"DateOfDemise":null,"location":"Unknown","url":"/sootradhar/raju-murugan","tags":null,"created":"2023-09-22T12:18:55.869130","is_has_special_post":false,"is_special_author":false,"language":16}],"description":"<p style=\"text-align: center; font-size: 24px;\"> The Great Poets and Writers in Indian and World History! </p>","image":"https://kavishalalab.s3.ap-south-1.amazonaws.com/sootradhar_description/black.jpg"}