Some years ago, a professor of English in south India got around to organising a four-day seminar titled “On Creating a Modern Classic”. Everything went well till the third day when a professor of English from Singapore declared the title was absurd. How could a work be a classic before it is created? Even more absurd was the term ‘modern classic’. To be called a classic, a work has to be time-tested, and should be at least 100 years old. He shattered the composure of all the participants who had read papers earlier and those who were about to.
There are hundreds of examples of works being extremely popular soon after they were published but being forgotten in less than 10 years. In 10 years, Erle Stanley Gardner wrote so many books that the resultant pillar, when the books were stacked, was taller than the tall writer. Harold Robbins, Jacqueline Susan, Arthur Hailey, Irving Wallace and Mario Puzo were once read by all ‘up-to-date’ men. Now, even shop assistants may not be sure if there were authors by those names. Maybe Mario Puzo is an exception. Because Marlon Brando is still remembered.
In 1941, it would have been impossible to think of the popular Tamil weekly,
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Kalki started a magazine in his own name soon after his release from the prison. He then began a lifelong project of writing historical novels. Though it is said he had
Since its publication, the novel has been serialised again and again in Kalki and as a book in a number of editions. Kalki’s four historical romances have been popular successes and it is surprising that, in 2012, it occurs to two young translators to render Sivakamiyin Sabatham in English. Pavitra Srinivasan had a release function for the first of the four parts, but Nandini Vijayaraghavan has got all four parts translated and published. One can’t find fault with either, but Nandini’s volumes are better edited.
The majority of Indians don’t know much about the history of south India and these translations should evoke curiosity about it. On reading Karthik Narayanan’s five-volume translation of
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Sivakamiyin Sabatham is a fictional account of two great emperors of the South. Both the Pallavas of Kanchi and the Chalukyas of Vatapi (now Badami) were great builders and have left behind extraordinary rock sculptures. Sivakamiyin Sabatham is a tribute to our past. It may not be a modern ‘classic’, but is certainly a time-tested popular classic!