Why do people receive the Nobel Prize in a wide variety of categories like literature? Whether other authors have not started trying yet is a wonderful knowledge about writing programs. Or the appropriate representation of the subject matter of the subject, it is completely objective and lacks all personal opinion. In this case, you should receive several awards from several writers and hand them over to other more reliable writers. V. S. Naipaul who won the Nobel Prize for literature belongs to the former category.
The famous writer V. S. Naipaul, the third generation Indian and from the Trinidad and Tobago who won the Nobel Prize are members of the world and are not normally part of IWE. In many of his books, Ny Paul reminds me of his thoughts on his personal feelings about his country, rootlessness, and India. The most important novels of contemporary Indian novelist in Urdu are Paigham Afaqui's Makaan (1956 -), Abdus Samad's Gaz Zameen, Ghazanfer's Pani. These works, especially Makan, made Urdu novels beyond popular themes related to Pakistan independence in 1947 as well as identity issues, and incorporated them into Indian contemporary reality and life issues. Makamine has influenced many British writers including Vikramses. Paigham Afaqui's second most important novel "Paleeta" was published in 2011 and depicts the political cry of Indian citizens 60 years after India became independent.
When VS Naipaul (who was neither Sir Vidya nor the Nobel laureate) began writing articles about India, he managed to use English to express the lack of pain in the history of a memorable motherland I was thinking. I found consolation in his work. Indian novelist RK Narayan. In a sense, Napole, a child of Indian immigrants in Trinidad, strongly recognizes the history not belonging to him. Narayan does not have such a problem and is writing in his hometown of Mysore, English in his fictional work Margudy. Naipaul said, "Because it is very personal and easy, there are no social associations in Britain or strange emotions, he seems to always write from his own culture.