Carl Muller Explained

Carl Muller
Birth Date:22 October 1935
Birth Place:Kandy, Sri Lanka
Death Place:Kandy
Occupation:Author, journalist
Nationality:Sri Lankan
Spouse:Sortain Harris
Notableworks:The Jam Fruit Tree
Children of the Lion

Kala Keerthi Carl Muller (22 October 1935  - 2 December 2019) was an award-winning Sri Lankan writer, poet and journalist best known for his trilogy about Burghers in Sri Lanka: The Jam Fruit Tree, Yakada Yaka and Once Upon A Tender Time. He won Gratiaen Awards for The Jam Fruit Tree in 1993[1] and a State Literary Award for his historical novel, Children of the Lion.[2] He was the first Sri Lankan author to publish a book internationally. He was reported to have died on 2 December 2019 which was confirmed by his son Jeremy Muller.[3] [4] [5]

Biography

Muller was born in Kandy, the eldest in a family of thirteen. Dismissed from three schools, Muller was finally educated at prestigious Royal College, Colombo. He started his first job as a weighbridge clerk at the Mosajee's Wystevyke Mill in Colombo, thereafter he joined the Royal Ceylon Navy and served as a signalman for four years. He then spent four months in the Ceylon Signal Corps, before being discharged as unfit for duty. He then joined the Colombo Port Commission as a signalman in the pilot station. Two years later he joined a new advertising agency established by Tim Horshington. This started his writing career working in advertising, travel and entertainment, before moving into journalism in Ceylon, Dubai and Bahrain. He served as vice-president for international sales at the Export Centre in Sharjah in 1970s with Fred Pettera and later joined Expo Centre Sharjah as part of the management team led by Fasahat Ali Khan under the ownership of Sharjah Chamber of Commerce and industry in 1992. He worked for the Times of Oman during the Gulf war before returning to Sri Lanka due to ill health.[6] [7] He went on to briefly serve in the Ceylon Army and later joined the (?) as a signals officer.[1] He married Sortain Harris.[6] He also worked for Gulf News and Khaleej Times in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

Muller retired from his lifelong work as the onset of dementia and other medical ailments took a toll on his health. He died on the 2nd of December 2019 at the age of 84 in Kandy with his three children and his grandson at his side.[8] [9]

Bibliography

Novels

Historical fiction

Science fiction

Essays

Short stories

Poetry

  1. Our Star ship and its Sorry Crew

Children's fiction

Academic works

Views and reviews

Monographs

Aphorism

Hobbies

Travelogues

Works edited

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.galleliteraryfestival.com/2007/authors/carlmuller.htm Profile of Carl Muller at The Galle Literary Festival Website
  2. Web site: 'Writing till I drop' – Carl Muller . 13 July 2008 . . 3 February 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080207185945/http://www.sundayobserver.lk/2008/02/03/plus05.asp . 7 February 2008 . live .
  3. Web site: Carl Muller – In memory of our father Daily FT. www.ft.lk. English. 2019-12-07.
  4. Web site: A Tribute to a literary genius : Carl Muller bids farewell - Sri Lanka Latest News. 2019-12-05. Sri Lanka News - Newsfirst. en. 2019-12-07.
  5. Web site: Award winning writer and poet Carl Muller dies. Daily News. en. 2019-12-07.
  6. Web site: A story teller like no other . https://archive.today/20080109192604/http://www.thesundayleader.lk/20070923/arts.htm . dead . 9 January 2008 . 13 July 2008 . Sunday Leader . 23 September 2007 .
  7. Web site: DE SILVA . MANIK . Master of Faction . himalmag.com . July 1997 . 29 September 2021.
  8. http://www.litencyc.com/php/speople.php?rec=true&UID=4953 Carl Muller – The Literary Encyclopaedia
  9. Web site: Award winning Sri Lankan writer, poet Carl Muller passed away Colombo Gazette. admin. 4 December 2019 . en-GB. 2019-12-05.
  10. Book: Muller, Carl . Spit and Polish . 2000 . Penguin Books . 978-014-0270-23-5 . India.