Kartar Singh Duggal
Personal Information
Description
Kartar Singh Duggal was born in Dhamal, Rawalpindi District (now in Pakistan). He is married to Ayesha Duggal. He received an M.A. degree in English from Forman Christian College in Lahore. In 1942, Duggal worked for All India Radio (AIR). He was station director, and he wrote and produced programmes in Punjabi and other languages. During this time, he also wrote many plays. In 1966, he left AIR to become the Secretary/Director of the National Book Trust of India. In 1973, he became an Information Advisor at the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting. In 1984 he was nominated Fellow of the Punjabi University. In 1997 he was nominated to the Rajya Sabha (Indian Parliament Upper House). Over the course of his career, Duggal has published twenty four collections of short stories, ten novels, seven plays, seven works of literary criticism, two poetry collections and an autobiography. His works have been translated into Indian and foreign languages.
Books
Niwekalī nuhāra, Prītama Siṅgha "Safīra"
Critical study on the works of Pritam Singh, b. 1916, Panjabi poet.
Kahāṇīkāra Duggala bakallama k̲h̲uda
Self analysis of his short stories by Kartar Singh Duggal, b. 1917, Panjabi literatteur.
Come back, my master, and other stories
Selected short stories, translated into English by the author.
Yuga kawī Mohana Siṅgha
Study on the works of Mohan Singh, b. 1905, Panjabi poet.
Maiṃ te mere samakālī
Reminiscences of a Panjabi author about some of his contemporary authors.
Yāda karadiāṃ
Reminiscences of a Panjabi writer about his contemporaries.
Merī sāhittika sawai-jīwanī
Autobiography of a Panjabi litterateur.
Kahāṇī kalā te merā anubhawa
Author's own observations about his short stories.
Giani Gurmukh Singh Musafir
Biography of Guramukha Siṅgha Musāfara, 1899-1976, Panjabi author; includes selected short stories and poems, translated into English.
Literary encounters
Articles on books and authors in Panjabi, Hindi, Urdu, and English.
Death of a song and other stories
Selected and translated from the original Punjabi.
