Virginia Woolf once described modernist  fiction as “a thing you could ruffle with your breath, and a thing you could not dislodge with a team of horses”. That precisely  captures R. Chudamani’s art and craft as a short story writer.
  A major  twentieth-century writer, Raghavan Chudamani (1931–2010) has often been  identified as an early feminist among Tamil writers. Subtly radical in her  approach to human relations and social issues, her critique of entrenched  social institutions and attendant attitudes is sharp and revelatory. She  challenges the way society perceives human beings, conditioned and constituted  as they are by family, community, education and religion. Her stories traverse  psychological, existential and socio-economic issues as also ordinary everyday  human experience; encompassing both the universal and the particular, they  reveal an empathy and insight that are profoundly human. 
  Chudamani’s representations  of the mother figure as also of the male psyche, largely in a middle-class  milieu, are remarkably free of clichés. Similarly, her treatment of the  experiences of the rites of passage, her insights into human nature,  motivations, and their articulated expressions are refreshingly clear-sighted.  Chudamani also has the ability to enter adult, sub-adult and child  consciousnesses with ease. Her open-minded approach to issues, individual,  familial and societal, gives her writing a rare candidness. 
  This fine and  beautifully translated selection of stories from the Tamil collection Tanimaittalir opens routine-addicted  middle-class minds, of men and women, to other ways of living and being. This collection will greatly appeal to any serious  reader interested in Indian life and fiction.