Indian-Canadian writer (born 1979)
Anand Mahadevan is an Indian -Canadian writer, who was awarded an Honour of Distinction from the Dayne Ogilvie Prize for LGBT writers in 2013.[ 1]
Born and raised in Tamil Nadu , India ,[ 2] Mahadevan moved to the United States at age 17 to study.[ 2] He moved to Canada in 2002,[ 3] and teaches science at the University of Toronto Schools and creative writing at the Humber School for Writers .
The Strike , his debut novel about a young Tamil man's gay sexual awakening, was published in Canada by TSAR Publications in 2006.[ 4] Its publication in India followed in 2009.[ 4]
His second novel, tentatively titled American Sufi , is slated for future publication.[ 3]
He has also been an active supporter of the campaign to strike down Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code , which criminalized homosexuality in India.[ 5]
He subsequently served on the jury for the 2015 Dayne Ogilvie Prize, selecting Alex Leslie as that year's winner.[ 6]
Works
References
Winners Honour of Distinction
Brian Francis , John Miller (2008)
Greg Kearney (2009)
Lisa Foad , George K. Ilsley (2010)
Dani Couture , Matthew J. Trafford (2011)
Mariko Tamaki (2012)
Anand Mahadevan , Barry Webster (2013)
Rae Spoon , Proma Tagore (2014)
Casey Plett , Vivek Shraya (2015)
Gwen Benaway , Jia Qing Wilson-Yang (2016)
Ali Blythe , Eva Crocker (2017)
Trish Salah , Joshua Whitehead (2018)
Joelle Barron , Casey Plett (2019)
Robyn Maynard , Smokii Sumac (2020)
Kama La Mackerel , jaye simpson (2021)
Bilal Baig , Matthew James Weigel (2022)
Gabriel Cholette , Amanda Cordner and David Di Giovanni (2023)
Vincent Anioke , Éric Chacour (2024)