In the age of Wikipedia, it has been forgotten how important the Encyclopaedia  Britannica once was in the mind of the English-reading Indian. Seen as the  supreme repository of knowledge, it was also a status symbol sought as  bookshelf adornment.
  What most people do not know at all is how an  intrepid band of Tamil intellectuals, inspired seventy-five years ago by the Britannica,  decided to create an encyclopaedia in their own language. They felt a linguistic  system as advanced as theirs, with a literary history stretching two millennia,  needed to showcase its civilisational achievement: it was imperative that Tamil  boast its own encyclopaedia. The odds against realising this ideal were  impossible. And yet the project of compiling the Kalaikkalanjiyam – the  Tamil Encyclopaedia – began and was soon unstoppable.
  This intriguing episode of Indian intellectual life is  as forgotten as its narration here is compelling. Book history comes brilliantly  alive in A.R. Venkatachalapathy’s vibrant chronicling – from the conception of  an extravagant idea to its execution as a printed work. This story of lofty ideals and financial  scandals, bruised egos and ideological conflicts reveals  a fascinating world of cultural enterprise, political struggle, and regional  nationalism. 
  This is a book for every reader of history.