G.S. Sharat Chandra



G.S. Sharat Chandra (1935–2000) was an internationally acclaimed author of both poetry and fiction. Much of his work touches on the deep emotions of the Indian/American immigrant.

Indian-born Chandra received a law degree in India but came to the United States in the 1960s to become a writer. He received a Master of Fine Arts from the Iowa Writers Workshop.

For most of his career, Chandra taught at the University of Missouri-Kansas City as a professor of Creative Writing and English (1983–2000). Author of ten books, including translations from Sanskrit and English into the Indian language Kannada, Chandra has given readings at the Library of Congress, the University of Oxford, and McDaid's Pub in Dublin.

Chandra traveled the world extensively throughout his life and received international recognition for both his poetry and fiction. His works have appeared in many journals including American Poetry Review, London Magazine, The Nation, and Partisan Review.

Chandra was married to his wife, Jane, for 38 years until he died of a brain aneurysm in 2000. He left three children.

Writing
Sharat was a gifted teacher of creative writing. He encouraged persistence, craft, and imagination. He did so with humor and compassion. As a teacher at the Mark Twain Writer's Workshop, he once read from a stack of rejection letters, which he claimed papered the walls of his writing study. With regard to the writerly imagination, and the importance of craft, he once said: "You can tell me anything, anything at all.  Just make me believe!"

Recognition
Sharat was a Fulbright Fellow and recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship in Creative Writing.

His most famous work, Family of Mirrors, was a 1993 Pulitzer Prize in Poetry nominee.

Work

 * April in Nanjangud, Alan Ross Ltd., London Magazine Editions, 1971;
 * Once or Twice, Hippopotamus Press, UK, 1974;
 * The Ghost of Meaning, Lewis-Clark State College, Confluence Press, Idaho, 1976;
 * Heirloom, Oxford University Press, 1982;
 * Family of Mirrors, BkMk Press, 1993;
 * Immigrants of Loss, Hippopotamus Press, 1993–94,
 * Sari of the Gods, 1998.