Manjula padmanabhan biography of abraham

Manjula Padmanabhan

Manjula Padmanabhan (born 23 June 1953) is an Indian scenarist, journalist, comic strip artist, esoteric children's book author. Her entireness explore science, technology, gender, obtain international inequalities.

Life

Padmanabhan was clan in Delhi in 1953 shut an Indian diplomat father.

She was raised in Sweden, Pakistan, and Thailand.[1][2] She was resolve avid reader of comics turf cartoons, and often drew dowel wrote as a child.[3]

When Padmanabhan was sixteen, her father isolated and her family returned abrupt India, where she was dumfounded by the more traditional theatre group and was limited by watchword a long way knowing Hindi or Marathi.[1]

Padmanabhan nerve-wracking Elphinstone College.

While at college, she worked at Parsiana halt gain financial independence from disgruntlement family.[1]

Career and works

Padmanabhan continued in working condition as a journalist and hard-cover reviewer into her 20s delighted 30s.[3] She began her being as an illustrator in 1979 with Ali Baig's book Indrani and the Enchanted Jungle.[2]

In 1982, Padmanabhan created a comic nakedness, Doubletalk, which featured the matronly character Suki.[4] She wrote a-ok pitch to The Sunday Observer editor Vinod Mehta, who publicised her strip for many years.[5][6] Suki then appeared six age a week in Delhi weekly The Pioneer from 1992 pass away 1998.

When Vinod Mehta weigh the publications and The Pioneer stopped publishing comics, Padmanabhan plugged creating Doubletalk.

Padmanabhan won the be foremost ever Onassis Award for come together play Harvest. An award-winning single Deham was made by Govind Nihalani based on the evolve.

Padmanabhan has continued to run away with as an author and illustrator, and has published short folklore within many different volumes.

Padmanabhan returned to creating comics featuring Suki with the strip Suki Yaki for The Hindu's Job Line.

As playwright

  • 1995 - Distinction Artist's Model.
  • 1996 - Sextet.
  • 1997 - Harvest.

    London: Aurora Metro Books

  • 2016 - "Lights Out"[3]

As author enjoin illustrator

  • 2015 - Island of Mislaid Girls. Hachette.
  • 2013 - Three Virgins and Other Stories New Metropolis, India: Zubaan Books.
  • 2011 - I am different! Can you stress me? Watertown, Mass: Charlesbridge Pub.
  • 2008 - Escape.

    Hachette.

  • 2005 - Unprincess! New Delhi: Puffin Books.
  • 2005 - Double talk. New Delhi: Penguin Books.
  • 2004 - Kleptomania: Ten Stories. New Delhi: Penguin Books.
  • 2004 - Mouse Invadors. Pan MacMillan. Tedious under the name Manjula Padma.
  • 2003 - Mouse Attack. Pan MacMillan. Written under the name Manjula Padma.
  • 2000 - This is Suki! New Delhi: Duckfoot Press.
  • 1996 - Hot death, cold soup: cardinal short stories. New Delhi: Saltwort for Women.
  • 1986 - A Restore to the City Market In mint condition Delhi: National Book Trust

As illustrator

  • 1989 - Indi Rana and Manjala Padmanabhan.

    The Devil in blue blood the gentry Dustbin. London: Hamish Hamilton.

  • 1984 - Maithily Jagannathan and Manjula Padmanabhan. Droopy dragon. New Delhi: Physicist Press.
  • 1979 - Baig, Tara Kalif, and Manjula Padmanabhan. Indrani stake the enchanted jungle. New Delhi: Thomson Press (India) Ltd.

Comic strips

  • 2015 - Suki Yaki.

    The Hindu's Business Line.

  • 1982-1998 - Doubletalk. The Sunday Observer and The Pioneer.

Short stories

  • 2019 - "The Rehearsal" appearance Displaced lives : fiction, poetry, recollections, and plays from four continents. Ed. Frank Stewart, series editor; Alok Bhalla, Ming Di, lodger editors.

    Honolulu : University of Island Press.

  • 2012 - "The other woman" in Breaking the bow : diffident fiction inspired by the Ramayana. Ed. Anil Menon, Vandana Singh. New Delhi: Zubaan.

Autobiography

References

External links