The 9th edition of the Kalinga Literary Festival (KLF) held between 24 and 26 February in the city of Bhubaneshwar saw a stellar line-up of nearly 80 sessions spread across three days, covering a diverse array of topics, themes and subjects. The festival’s main attractions were award-winning authors and thinkers, in both fiction and non-fiction, in multiple languages including English, Hindi, Odia, Maithili, Nepali, Urdu, Sinhalese, Bengali, Japanese and Italian. The festival opened with the Honourable Governor of Odisha, Professor Ganeshi Lal felicitating Dr Ramesh Prasad Panigrahi and Geetanjali Shree, two literary powerhouses in Odia theatre and English fiction respectively. In his keynote address, Prof. Lal stressed on the ways in which “literature is a journey from the self to the non-self,” setting the tone for the three-day-long celebration of literariness where writers mulled over the place of literature and art in the world today. Presiding over the KLF awards ceremony—where writers were felicitated in 20 categories—was 2014 Nobel Peace Prize winner Kailash Satyarthi, who, in a special video address, emphasised the need for compassion in a globalised world with India leading the way. Satyarthi was also felicitated with the KLF Non-fiction Book Award for his book, Tum Pehle Kyon Nahi Aaye, a non-fiction book published by Rajkamal Prakashan in 2022.
Dr Panigrahi received the Kalinga Literary Award (Odia) for his formidable body of work — 83 plays written during his career as an educationist, playwright, theatre director and art critic. He was also a panellist in the session on ‘Performativity in Contemporary Odia plays’ along with Rabinarayan Dash, Purushottam Mishra, Bijaya Satapathy and Nibedita Jena unpacking pressing issues in contemporary Odia theatre. The Kalinga International Literary Award (English & Hindi language) and a cash prize of Rs 1 lakh were awarded to Geetanjali Shree, whose novel Ret Samadhi, translated into English as Tomb of Sand by Daisy Rockwell, won the International Booker Prize last year. In a discussion of her book at the KLF, Shree read out excerpts from Ret Samadhi to a packed house and also discussed her work ethic, the ‘stream of consciousness' style of writing, her views on the translations of her book as well as proffered writing advice to young novelists.