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R. K. Narayan was always one of my favorite Indian writers and Ruskin Bond. Many people shake their heads sorry if they have heard about him when I tend to casually ask friends and family around me. However, thanks to the TV series Malgudi Days aired on Doordarshan in the 1980s, a lot of people were very acquainted with his creative fictitious city Malgudi. Several people also saw a movie guide starring Dev Anand. There are few people who know that the original novel based on this movie was written by R. K Narayan in 1958. Another interesting fact I have recently discovered is that R. K Narayan is a brother of R.K. Laxman is one of the most famous cartoonists in India and is the creator of "ordinary people".
Guide, R. novel. Narayan is rooted in everyday, realistic characters who believe that he depicts Indian way of living. This Bildungsroman novel is two stories of one episode, chronologically spoken. He reflects Raju's life since childhood. Raju is in the fictitious city of Narayan, Malgudi, talking about the past in the first person story and talking about experience as Swami in the third person story.
R. K Narayan is a legendary storyteller in India. The story proceeds in chronological order, and each subsequent event has a causal relationship with the previous event. Narayan is a short story writer, a novelist, and he has a limit. He is knowledgeable and has a good understanding of the middle class living in South India. However, the tragic depth of moving internal fibers is beyond the scope of Narayan. He is good at the background, but bold and dramatic flash is not suitable for him.
R. K.'s novel, Narayan, reflects the sensitivity of India, born from the wisdom of Indian philosophical thinking, the wisdom of Indian philosophy has been enriching from ancient times but has retreated from colonization. Narayan uses this theoretical foundation of Indian philosophical tradition to search and reconstruct Indian senses. - In October 1991, the US Congress passed a law permitting two million dollars to finance the office of the National Institutes of Health, which is dedicated to investigating non-traditional medical practices. Seven years later, the National Complementary Alternative Medical Center (NCCAM) became the official department of the National Institutes of Health.