Molly Daniels (author)

Last updated
Molly Daniels
BornMolly Daniels
(1932-07-02)2 July 1932
Thiruvalla
Died26 November 2015(2015-11-26) (aged 83)
Ithaca, New York
OccupationWriter, educator
Spouse
(m. 1962;div. 1971)
(m. 1974;div. 1988)

Molly Daniels (also Shourie Daniels, Molly Daniels-Ramanujan; 2 July 1932 - 26 November 2015) was an Indian-American writer of fiction and criticism, who also taught writing.

Contents

Education and Career

Daniels was born in 1932 in Thiruvalla, India. She went to Indiana University on a Fulbright scholarship in 1961. She earned a doctorate at the University of Chicago in 1986.

Haladi Meenu, a work of fiction written by Daniels and translated to Kannada by A. K. Ramanujan, was published in 1966. (The English original, Yellow Fish, was never published.) Daniels' novel The Salt Doll came out in 1978. Upon re-issue in 2018, the novel was received as "an exhilarating exercise in wit and verve" [1] and as a "remarkable but forgotten book, that is almost a palimpsest of Arundhati Roy’s God of Small Things". [2] In 1984, Daniels wrote G. V. Desani: Writer and Worldview, a monograph on the British-Indian writer. She returned to fiction in 1986 with A City of Children and Other Stories. Daniels later wrote The Prophetic Novel (1991), a critical essay on the inter-weaving of multiple belief systems in E. M. Forster's A Passage to India.

Daniels taught writing for many years, both at the University of Chicago’s continuing education program and at her own Clothesline School of Writing. She taught idiosyncratically, throwing pencils, advising her students on diet and lifestyle, and encouraging them to get "all the autobiographical stuff out-and out of the way". [3] Daniels also compiled a book of writing lessons and exercises, The Clothesline Review Manual for Writers (1987).

Towards the end of her life, Daniels lived in an ecovillage in Ithaca, New York. She profiled several ecovillage residents for The Epoch Times, and in 2011 these profiles were collected into a volume Under a Green Shade: Epoch Times Biographies. [4]

Personal life

Daniels married fellow Fulbright scholar A. K. Ramanujan in 1962, and the two divorced nine years later. Daniels and Ramanujan married again in 1974 and divorced again in 1988. [1] The couple had two children, Krishna Ramanujan and Krittika Ramanujan. Daniels died on 26 November 2015.

Works

Fiction

Non-fiction

As Editor

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References

  1. 1 2 Surendran, CP (June 7, 2019). "Review: Journeys; A Poet's Diary by AK Ramanujan and The Salt Doll by Molly Daniels Ramanujan". Hindustan Times . Retrieved November 29, 2024.
  2. Sethi, Rumina (December 16, 2018). "Rebel without a Pause". Tribune India . Retrieved November 29, 2024.
  3. "No Middle Ground". Chicago Tribune . November 18, 1994. Retrieved November 29, 2024.
  4. "Under a Green Shade: Epoch Times Biographies". Writers Workshop (publisher) . Retrieved November 29, 2024.