B. Jeyamohan

B. Jeyamohan
Jeyamohan in September 2022
Jeyamohan in September 2022
Born (1962-04-22) 22 April 1962 (age 62)
Thiruvarambu, Kanyakumari district, Tamil Nadu, India
Occupation
LanguageTamil, Malayalam
Period1985–present
Subject
  • Literature
  • philosophy
Notable works
Spouse
Arunmozhi Nangai
(m. 1991)
Children2
Website
jeyamohan.in

Bahuleyan Jeyamohan (born 22 April 1962) is an Indian Tamil and Malayalam language writer and literary critic from Nagercoil in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu.

His best-known and most critically acclaimed work is Vishnupuram, a fantasy set as a quest through various schools of Indian philosophy and mythology. In 2014, he started his most ambitious work Venmurasu, a modern renarration of the epic Mahabharata and successfully completed the same, thus creating the world's longest novel ever written.[1]

His other well-known novels include Rubber, Pin Thodarum Nizhalin Kural, Kanyakumari, Kaadu, Pani Manidhan, Eazhaam Ulagam and Kotravai. The early major influences in his life have been the humanitarian thinkers Leo Tolstoy and Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi. Drawing on the strength of his life experiences and extensive travel around India, Jeyamohan is able to re-examine and interpret the essence of India's rich literary and classical traditions.[2]

Born into a Malayali Nair family in the Kanyakumari district that straddles Tamil Nadu and Kerala, Jeyamohan is equally adept in Tamil and Malayalam. However, the bulk of his work has been in Tamil. Jeyamohan's output includes nine novels, ten volumes of short-stories/plays, thirteen literary criticisms, five biographies of writers, six introductions to Indian and Western literature, three volumes on Hindu and Christian philosophy and numerous other translations and collections. He has also written scripts for Malayalam and Tamil movies.[3]

  1. ^ "Director Mani Ratnam launches Musical Tribute to Jeyamohan's Venmurasu". www.DailyHerald.com. Retrieved 18 March 2022.
  2. ^ Shankarramasubramanian (6 September 2014). "Interview: Writer Jeyamohan". The Hindu. Retrieved 7 February 2017.
  3. ^ Ramnath, N.S. (6 July 2011). "The Tamil Film Industry's New Storyline". Forbes India. Retrieved 10 July 2011.