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Ved (Parkash) Mehta (Born March 21, 1934) is a distinguished Indian writer who was born in Lahore, British India (now a Pakistani city) to a Hindu family. Events 630 - Byzantine emperor Heraclius restores the True Cross to Jerusalem. Year 1934 ( MCMXXXIV) was a Common year starting on Monday (link will display full 1934 calendar of the Gregorian calendar. A writer is anyone who creates a written work although the word usually designates those who write creatively or professionally as well as those who have written in many different forms ( lahor is the capital of the Pakistani province of Punjab and is the second largest city in Pakistan after Karachi. For usage see British rule in India British Raj ( rāj, lit "reign" in Hindustani) primarily refers to the British Pakistan () officially the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, is a country located in South Asia, Southwest Asia, Middle East and A Hindu ( Devanagari: हिन्दू is an adherent of the philosophies and scriptures of Hinduism, a set of religious, Philosophical He lost his sight at the age of three as the result of a long bout of cerebrospinal meningitis. Meningitis is Inflammation of the protective membranes covering the Brain and Spinal cord, known collectively as the Meninges. His father, a doctor, tried to give him an education, like his other children, so that the boy could become a self-supporting citizen of the world.

Mehta has lived in the Western world since 1949; he became an American citizen in 1975. This article refers to the cardinal direction for other uses see West (disambiguation. He was educated at Pomona College, at Balliol College, Oxford where he read Modern History, and at Harvard University. Pomona College is a private residential liberal arts college located in Claremont California. Balliol College (ˈbeɪlɪəl founded in 1263 is one of the constituent colleges of the University of Oxford in England. His first book was published in 1957. Since then he has written 24 books, as well as hundreds of articles and short stories, for British, Indian and American publications, including the The New Yorker, where Mehta worked as a staff writer for 33 years. The New Yorker is an American Magazine that publishes reportage commentary criticism essays fiction satire cartoons and poetry

He is the recipient of several awards including the Guggenheim Fellowship and the MacArthur Prize. Guggenheim Fellowships are American grants that have been awarded annually since 1925 by the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation to those "who The MacArthur Fellows Program or MacArthur Fellowship (sometimes Nicknamed the "genius grant") is an award given by the John D He has been a visiting Fellow at Balliol College, Oxford, held the Rosenkranz Chair in writing at Yale University and taught Literature and History at a number of colleges and universities. Balliol College (ˈbeɪlɪəl founded in 1263 is one of the constituent colleges of the University of Oxford in England. Oxford is currently bidding for the 2010 Wikimania Conference Oxford () is a city, and the County town of Oxfordshire,

At the age of sixteen he went to a school for the blind in Arkansas, where he completed his elementary and high school education in three years. From there he went on to Pomona, Oxford and Harvard.

Upon returning to India he felt like a foreigner in his own country and set out to re-discover it. He traveled extensively and met hundreds of people for writing his books "Walking the Indian Streets" and "Portrait of India". Years later he also wrote a book, "Gandhi and his Apostles", because of a profound realization that rich and privileged Indians live in a bubble that bobs up and down on an ocean of poverty, and that Gandhi, like himself, was from that bubble of privilege, for Gandhi too had gone on to study Law in England.

His first book, "Face to Face", a youthful autobiography, was published in 1952, just before he went to Oxford. He dictated it to his first love during his intensely lonely years at Pomona college in California. His blindness prevented him from joining the fast set with their large cars, and he felt like a blind Scherezade telling his story to his amanuensis.

His forays into fiction include "Three Stories from the Raj". Ved Mehta has been writing books for over fifty years, and chose to be a writer over the option he had of being an academician. He writes because he has to, from an inner need and compulsion, and often, as he wryly adds, he "goes on adding to a book long after it has been published. "

But notwithstanding his books on India, his forays into fiction, and his long tenure as a staff writer for the New Yorker from 1961 to 1994, his writing appeal is intensely autobiographical.

His eleven volume memoir, "Continents of Exile", was completed while working at the same time on other books, over a period of thirty-two years, from 1972 to 2004.

Beginning with the first two volumes, "Daddyji" and "Mummyji", "Continents of Exile" covers the saga of the Mehta and Mehra clans from mid-nineteenth century British India, through Independence and the turmoil of Partition in 1947, as well as his own experiences in a boarding school for the blind at the age of five, as a college student in California and at Oxford in the 1950's, his agonized search for love, his dangerous attempts to live a "normal" life, as though he were not blind, and culminates in "The Red Letters", in which he writes about his father's passionate love affair with a long-lost love who came back into his life as his wife's best friend, and how it affected his mother.

Each of the volumes of "Continents of Exile" can be read independently. They are rich in detail, vivid descriptions, and permeated with his compassion, and his profound insight into himself and his fellow men. At the heart of the series is "Vedi", in which he vividly recalls his experiences at a boarding school for the blind in Bombay in the 1940's. His father had sent him there at the age of five in the mistaken belief that it was a posh, British-type boarding school for blind children. In fact, it was a school and an asylum for destitute blind children, some of them had been beggars. Though little Vedi was given special privileges because of the handsome fee his father paid, like sleeping on a bed with a mattress, instead of wooden planks, and having his meals with the Principal and his family, and was exempted from the class of learning "how to cane chairs", he grew to love his humble classmates.

In "The Ledge between the Streams" he describes the lonely years that followed, as his family did not know how to educate a blind child. He spent much time with the servants in their simple quarters on the grounds of his parents bungalow and learned to feel a profound compassion for their humble but useful lives of loyalty, love and service.

Old photographs of the author's extended family and himself as a child can be seen on his website, as well as Ved Mehta with his wife and children to-day.

Criticism

Mehta was the subject of an unflattering profile by Jennet Conant in the September 1989 issue of Spy magazine. Spy magazine was a satirical monthly founded in 1986 by Kurt Andersen and E Titled "Slaves of The New Yorker," it documented his reliance on and emotional abuse of a string of editorial assistants, known as "Vedettes. " The article and an accompanying sidebar (titled "The Long and the Short of It--But Mostly the Long of It") described Mehta's autobiographical writings as prolix, self-indulgent, and boring.

Publications


External links

Don Swaim (born 1936 is an American journalist and broadcaster.
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