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between 1971 and 1987, initially as an editor and later as the CEO of OUP's Delhi office. After his retirement in 1987, he opened his own publishing company, Ravi Dayal
Publishers, which did fairly well. Encouraged by this relative success, he decided to start a literary magazine in English, and in
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was an Indian literary magazine, launched in 1994 by publisher Ravi Dayal. In all its years of existence, the "magazine" has published exactly five issues, and none at all since the death of Ravi Dayal in 2006. Since the magazine is still nominally in existence, and was never "functional" to begin
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The magazine sought to challenge the traditional literary model by refusing to publish to a set schedule. Instead, it prioritized quality, with issues appearing only when the editors felt that they had an adequate quantity of intelligent, well-written and inspirational material to justify
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publication. The result has been five issues to date, all defined (or so the editors claim) by their eclecticism, intelligence and originality.
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Ravi Dayal died on 4 June 2006 at the age of 69, and the magazine can be considered defunct from this date onwards. A book entitled
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was edited by practising writers rather than academics. It therefore had no defined literary manifesto which determined content.
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is ultimately a testimony to power of the story to describe and illuminate.
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edited by Rukun Advani and dedicated to Ravi Dayal as well as
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Ravi Dayal, who gave space to new Indian writing, is no more
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were edited by Rukun Advani (two issues), Ivan Hutnik,
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Ravi Dayal, the magazine's publisher, had worked with
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322:The Hindu
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