Abhimanyu Acharya Explained

Abhimanyu Acharya
Birth Date:1994 9, df=y
Birth Place:Surendranagar, Gujarat, India
Nationality:Indian
Language:Gujarati
Alma Mater:St. Xavier's College, Ahmedabad
Notableworks:Padchhayao Vacche (2018)
Awards:Yuva Puraskar (2020)

Abhimanyu Acharya (born 24 September 1994) is an Indian short story writer and playwright from Gujarat, India. He received the 2020 Yuva Puraskar for his short story collection Padchhayao Vacche ("Between the Shadows").

Biography

Abhimanyu Acharya was born on 24 September 1994 in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India. In 2010, he moved to Ahmedabad where he completed his schooling from St. Xavier's High School, and graduated from St. Xavier's College.[1] At present, he is pursuing his Ph.D. at the University of Western Ontario, Canada in Comparative literature.[2] [3]

Works

Acharya's first short story was published in the Gujarati magazine Navneet Samarpan in 2009. His short story collection, Padchhayao Vacche ("Between the Shadows"), was published by Rangdwar Publication in 2018.[4] His stories deal with themes of love and sexuality, and often combines traditional storytelling with formal experimentation and lyricism.[5] [6] In 2022, his short story "Chunni" appeared in The Greatest Gujarati Stories Ever Told, edited by Rita Kothari.[7] [3]

His play Roundabout was staged in Gujarat and Karnataka. He directed Madhu Rye's Tell Me The Name Of A Flower in 2018.[2]

Awards

Acharya received the 2020 Yuva Puraskar for his short story collection Padchhayao Vacche[8] for which, he also received Gujarat Sahitya Akademi's Best Book Prize (2020).[9] He received the Sanhita Manch playwriting award for his Hindi play Bhes. He was twice longlisted for TOTO Funds the Arts Award for his English writing.[3]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Gujarati Navlekhan Vartao (Anthology of Gujarati short stories). Joshi. Yogesh. Yogesh Joshi (poet). National Book Trust of India. 2016. 978-81-237-7790-0. New Delhi. 135. gu.
  2. Web site: Abhimanyu Acharya, Author at The Theatre Times. The Theatre Times. 14 February 2022.
  3. Book: Kothari, Rita. Rita Kothari. The Greatest Gujarati Stories Ever Told. 2022. Aleph Book Company. New Delhi. 226. 978-93-91047-48-1.
  4. Chitralekha. 27 September 2021. Gujarat Diary. 24.
  5. Naik. Ila. Vora. Kamal. Kamal Vora. Mehta. Naushil. July–September 2014. Rachanakala No Jadu. gu:રચનાકલાનો જાદુ. The Magic of Narrative Art. Etad. Mumbai. Kshitij Sanshodhan Prakashan Kendra. 72–74. 2350-0689.
  6. Chauhan. Ajaysinh. Ajaysinh Chauhan. Purohit. Vipul. Book Review: Padchhayao Vacche. Shabdasrishti. September 2019. 89–93. 2319-3220. gu.
  7. News: HT Picks; New Reads. Hindustan Times. 29 January 2022. 18 February 2022.
  8. Web site: Yuva Puraskar (2011-2020). Sahitya Akademi. 14 February 2022.
  9. News: કચ્છમિત્રમાં પ્રસિદ્ધ થયેલી નવલકથા 'સોન ટેકરી'ને અકાદમીનું ત્રીજું ઇનામ . Kutchmitra . 14 Feb 2022 . 14 Feb 2022.