6 products
An Iron Fist in a Velvet Glove/Jayanthi Sankar
Regular price Rs. 450.00
Bowie Rowan
Khushboo Shah
Narayani V Manapadam
Chandra Sundeep
Sangeetha Kamath
Sinduja Rengarajan
P.Muralidharan
Mónica Lindo
Natasha Sharma
Rebecca Wilson Jones
Lalitha Ramanathan
Shravya L. Narasimhan
Vidya Murlidhar
Sangeetha Vallat
Rham Dhel
Monica Singh
Lovelace Cook
San Lin Tun
R. Sredhanea
Surabhi Kaushik
Salini Vineeth
Era.Murukan
Shahnaz Ahmed
Supriya Bansal
Dancing Gold Flecks-Adapting to changes-An anthology of short stories-created and edited by Jayanthi Sankar
Regular price Rs. 340.00
Dr. Aparna Nagda
Arun Elango
P. Muralidharan
Prarthana JA
Sandeep Koul
Sredhanea Ramkrishnan
Usha Nagasamy
Vidya Murlidhar
Devika Das
Natasha Sharma
Dr. Padma Arvind
Kanchi Raghuram
Megha Nath
Sangeetha Vallat
Somsubhra Banerjee
Subhashini Prasad
Surabhi Kaushik
When Will You Die?-Jayanthi Sankar
Regular price Rs. 340.00 Sale price Rs. 270.00 Save 21%
Disarmingly, charmingly simple, this book will give readers much to think about.
- Usha Nagasamy, Further Education teacher, London
When will you die?- an emotion in itself that many of us avoid and fear comes out as a beautiful literary rendition by Jayanthi Sankar and will stay a mystery and an enigma years after its time and haunt our hidden traumas, insecurities in ways we could never imagine.
- Sredhanea Ramkrishnan, Food technologist and upcoming author, India
Zooming in like a camera to explore the aspects of the human psyche at various levels across the vast framework of society at large, the brevity of this postmodern socio psychological novella fascinates me.
- Ethan Wynn, FinTech Analyst, Houston, USA
Jayanthi Sankar skillfully depicts human complexities with quite a few nuanced surprises in store in the epistolary novella When Will You Die? It leaves the reader reflecting on the toll relationships can take on humans, what it is to live after losing your moorings, and what it means to be torn apart by affection and hate.
- Dr. Revathy Sivasubramaniam, UX Researcher, Chennai, India
Another fresh work of fiction and storytelling with profound ideas that will intrigue many readers, as it did me. Left with countless lingering thoughts and debates, I haven’t been able to come out of it.
- Liu Fang, Further Education teacher, Hong Kong
The main characters in the novella for their own reasons do not share significant incidents of their lives and this effectively depicts the shallowness of modern day, contemporary relationships.
- P. Muralidharan, Writer, Chennai, India
TABULA RASA-JAYANTHI SANKAR-PRE BOOK
Regular price Rs. 470.00 Sale price Rs. 400.00 Save 15%
- Usha Nagasamy, Further Education College Lecturer, London
- Ethan Wynn, Houston, USA
- Sredhanea Ramkrishnan, Budding author and an Entrepreneur, India
- Liu Fang, Further Education Teacher, Hong Kong
- P. Muralidharan, Writer, Chennai, India
- Raaghav Sankar, Banker, Singapore
Customer Reviews
Misplaced Heads - Jayanthi Sankar
ZDP 176
Regular price Rs. 550.00 Sale price Rs. 465.00 Save 15%The shift in the time frames, from past to present are seamlessly flowing with respective
characters. The novelist has done dense research in every detail of the repertoire, the training of the
devadasis, and their style. I was awestruck. It was mind-blowing, to think about how she could even
decipher various adavus and various mudras used by us, dancers.
-Kalaimamani Dr. Radhika Shurajit, Dancer, Teacher, Choreographer, Chennai
This fiction is a standing testament that though times have changed immensely, the bare human
emotion towards art and feelings towards fellow human beings remain the same and are truly
eternal. A devadasi of the yesteryear would not fret towards a polygamous institution as much as a
conditioned woman today would. The ironies are brought out gracefully while normalizing many
human emotions, probably considered a taboo by the general public.
- Prathik Sudha Murali, Historian, Teacher, Public speaker, Chennai
In this fabulous post-modernistic, historical fiction with feministic metaphors, the protagonist
Poorna's perspective towards her man reads so much like the modern representation of the temple
a woman married to God.
- - Raaghav Sankar. Banking professional, Singapore
This creative work is very unique in putting together apparently disjointed fragments spanning
centuries and geographical locations and an array of characters from different eras with their quirky
and very specific to times tonality and expressions. The unfolding of the characters and the
experiences of the temple dancer communities bring to the reader an unrivaled perspective of the
honor and dignity of the much-misrepresented class of women.
-Usha Nagasamy, Lecturer in Further Education College, London
The expansive postmodernist novel peopled with over a dozen characters, spanning generations,
different ages, and varying milieus successfully trashes several misconceptions regarding the devadasi
culture in India. It attempts to correct the distorted picture of the system and chronicles the
downfall of devadasis and their rich culture and heritage with the advent of colonial rule.
Without romanticizing them, the author depicts them simply as human beings with their strengths
and flaws.
- Dr. Revathy Sivasubramaniam, Assistant Professor, Chellammal Women’s College, Chennai
Time has memories, it's said. But even time wouldn't be able to depict events spanned across Eras
so beautifully, given a chance. A reader becomes a student as history unveils itself in front of our
bare eyes, yet astonishingly aware of the present as we read about the parallel line of thought that
comes out through the protagonist's experiences. A film scope of South India through medieval,
Islamic, colonial, and the present-day - Misplaced Heads does exactly that, making us delve deeper
into the musings of the human heart and its madness by misplacing our heads.
- Sredhanea Ramakrishnan, an Entrepreneur, Theni, India
With a simple, yet beautiful and fluent language that any reader of any level can engage in, the author
has done commendable, innovative storytelling. With ease, she takes the reader to the ancient eras
and the contemporary modern world that I could visualize the events scene by scene. The reading
experience was strikingly memorable in that sense.
- Bina Amul Subnis, Singapore
Through the pains and sensitivities of the two contemporary protagonists, the author artistically
suggests that the heads are that of women who go misplaced when they want to assert, clarify, and
say no and spell out their views. In Misplaced Heads, one of the best works by female authors,
through the parallel thread of the centuries of temple women she opens windows of deviations that
brought about the decline in their services to ancient art and temples.
- P.Muralidharan, novelist, poet, literary critic and a translator, Chennai
The character-driven tale unfolds with the courage of a rural temple woman of South India during
the early 1900s, looking to break a stranglehold from her place in society. The crisp and clever
narrative smoothly draws readers into the times before and after her. A half-world away, we are
delivered unto the colonial streets of India.
- Krishna Ahir, the author of the novel, The Cat Hunter, Hyderabad
Author: Jayanthi Sankar
Genre: Literature and Fiction
Publishing House: Zero Degree Publishing
No. Of Pages: 492
Language: English
Customer Reviews
Dangling Gandhi - Jayanthi Sankar
ZDP07
Regular price Rs. 220.00 Sale price Rs. 185.00 Save 16%A spectacular bouquet of a dozen stories travelling across time and space through colourfully multicultural contexts. The nonlinear narrative style helps the reader flow with the kaleidoscopic presentation of events.
– Dr. Lalitha Menon, retd Professor and HOD, Calicut, India
The stories are aptly published while we celebrate Singapore’s Bicentennial. ‘Punkah Wallah’, a delightful fiction worth re-visiting brings to life the different classes of our society, origins, cultures and how they functioned during the earliest days of the last century. ‘Did Churchill know?’ left me pleasantly surprised, shocked, and bemused.
– Angela Leong, Director of a Research firm, Singapore
Thoroughly enjoyed the short stories, finding them gripping and touching, with unexpected little twists. On my second reading, with real concentration, I found them even more interesting. They made me think more, and that is a good thing!
– Valerie Dümpelmann, EFL instructor, Germany
… is not only a story of how different generations relate to literature. A brilliant short story emblematically highlights many of the problems that characterize Tamil literature as a set of social practices in Singapore today.
– Sascha Ebeling, Associate Professor, University of Chicago, USA
Author: Jayanthi Sankar
Genre: Literature and Fiction
Publishing House: Zero Degree Publishing
No. Of Pages: 152
Language: English