Literary figure Jayanta Mahapatra passes away at 95 in Odisha's Cuttack (Image/ANI) 
National

Eminent litterateur Jayanta Mahapatra passes away at 95

He authored poems such as 'Indian Summer' and 'Hunger', which are regarded as classics in modern Indian English literature.

ANI

BHUBANESWAR: Internationally acclaimed poet and litterateur, Jayanta Mahapatra passed away on Sunday at the age of 95 while undergoing treatment at the Srirama Chandra Bhanja (SCB) Medical College and Hospital in Odisha's Cuttack. Mahapatra was the first Indian poet to win a Sahitya Akademi (the fourth highest civilian honour in India) award for English poetry.

He authored poems such as 'Indian Summer' and 'Hunger', which are regarded as classics in modern Indian English literature.

The poet was conferred the Padma Shri in 2009 for his contribution to literature. However, he returned the award in 2015. Born on 22 October 1928, into a prominent Odia Christian family, Mahapatra went to school in Cuttack, Odisha. He began his teaching career as a lecturer in physics and taught at various government colleges in Odisha.

He began his writing career in the late sixties. His short stories and poems were initially rejected by several publishers, until his poems were published in international literary journals. Mahapatra authored 27 books on poems, of which seven are in Odia and the rest in English.

Chennai: One dead, 49 hurt as migrant workers watching IPL final fall after staircase handrail collapses

Tamil Nadu BJP airs concern over rising vacancies in government posts

Commercial LPG prices hiked by Rs 42 per 19-kg cylinder; no change in domestic cooking gas rates

'Beware of pickpockets': Rahul slams govt over CBSE re-evaluation cost

We have not just played, we dominated this year: RCB skipper Patidar