Krithika

Mathuram Bhoothalingam (pen name Krithika) was a Tamil writer who wrote plays and short stories in Tamil and English.[1]

Krithika
BornMathuram
1915
Bombay, British India
Died2009
Delhi, India
Pen nameKrithika
OccupationWriter, novelist, scriptwriter
NationalityIndian
SpouseS. Bhoothalingam

Personal life

Krithika was born as Mathuram in a Tamil-speaking family in Bombay in 1915.[2] At an early age, she moved to Delhi where she spent a considerable part of her life.[3] She was married to Subrahmanya Bhoothalingam, an ICS officer from Delhi.[3] The couple have a daughter, Mina Swaminathan.[3]

Krithika died in 2009 at the age of 93.[2]

Literary career

Mathuram started writing under the pen name "Krithika" from an early age.[1] Making her debut with the Tamil-language novel Puhai Naduvil, an acid look at the bureaucracy, she went on to write a number of children's stories, novels, and plays based on the puranas.[3]

Her play Manathile Oru Maru was directed by another famous writer of her time, Chitti (P. G. Sundararajan), with whom she shared a strong bond of friendship.[2][3] Chitti even authored a book titled An Introduction: Krithika and Mathuram Bhoothalingam.[4] Midway through her career, Krithika also started to write in English.

As Krithika started to write children's books apart from adult-centric stories, she began using her given name.[3] Krithika was one of the first Indian authors to regularly publish children's books in English.[3] Some of her important works in English are Movement in Stone, which looks at early Chola temples and the influence of Pallava art prior to the 9th and 10th centuries; and, Yoga for Living (1996), a contemporary look at the direction of India.[3]

Vasaveswaram is one of her works which focused on women and dealt with issues faced by them in the society.[4] Krithika has also authored books on Hindu Epics such as Ramayana.[5]

Her written correspondence with Chitti which spanned over 30 years have been brought together and published in the form of a book titled Lettered Dialogue by K. R. A. Narasaiah, a relative of Chitti.[6]

References

  1. Authors Guild of India (1986). Indian author. Authors Guild of India. p. 42. Retrieved 5 August 2012.
  2. Ramnarayan, Gowri (30 July 2012). "Writers as friends in correspondence". The Hindu. Retrieved 4 August 2012.
  3. S, Muthiah (25 May 2009). "A 40-year correspondence". The Hindu. Retrieved 4 August 2012.
  4. Adma Narayanan; Prema Seetharam (1 August 2004). "The truth as it is". The Hindu. Retrieved 5 August 2012.
  5. Modern Language Association of America. Conference on Oriental-Western Literary Relations (1966). Literature east & west. p. 405. Retrieved 5 August 2012.
  6. Ramnarayan, Gowri (30 July 2012). "Writers as friends in correspondence". The Hindu.
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