#BBLF (Book Brahma Literature Festival) is India’s only Indian Languages Literature Festival dedicated to celebrating the country’s rich linguistic diversity and uniting the nation through literature. Established by the Book Brahma Foundation in 2024, the inaugural edition received an overwhelming global response, particularly due to its unique digital outreach via live social media sessions that connected audiences worldwide.
The inaugural edition created a strong impact on the Indian literary ecosystem, bringing together over 450 authors from across the world. The three-day festival featured 90 sessions across five parallel venues, with 250 speakers discussing literature, culture, and the arts.
The Publisher Conclave saw participation from over 100 South Indian publishers, including a distinguished delegation from SALT (South Asian Literature in Translation) at the University of Chicago.
The festival also instituted the prestigious Book Brahma Sahithya Puraskara, presented annually on a rotational basis to distinguished writers from Tamil, Malayalam, Telugu, and Kannada literature. The first award was conferred on noted writer B. Jeyamohan for his outstanding contribution to world literature.
The second edition hosted over 600 authors and featured 180 sessions across eight venues, with special focus on the four South Indian languages, English, and the guest language, Marathi. Around 350 speakers participated in vibrant on-stage and off-stage conversations.
A special highlight was the celebration of the 2025 Booker Prize, with winners Banu Mushtaq and Deepa Bhasti drawing significant attention throughout the festival.
The Book Brahma Sahithya Puraskara 2025 was awarded to acclaimed Malayalam writer K. R. Meera. The festival also enabled meaningful reader–author interactions through book signings and literary networking spaces.
The third edition, #BBLF-2026, is set to further strengthen its vision of inclusivity, dialogue, and literary excellence, bringing together voices from across languages, cultures, and continents.
The Book Brahma Foundation is a Bengaluru-based independent charitable trust registered under Section 4 of the Indian Trusts Act, 1982. The Foundation is dedicated to promoting Indian literature, art, and culture in an inclusive and meaningful manner. The Book Brahma Literature Festival is a significant step toward realizing this vision.
With two highly successful editions held in 2024 and 2025, the Book Brahma Literature Festival has united South Indian languages in a historic and impactful way. Through #BBLF, the Foundation has created a vibrant platform where thousands of readers, writers, and thinkers come together to engage in dialogue, exchange creative ideas, and share collective wisdom. Today, #BBLF has emerged as one of India’s finest and most essential literature festivals, distinguished by its unique, inclusive, and unifying ethos.
The Foundation firmly believes in the power of literature, art, and culture to unite the world. It is equally committed to nurturing a future-ready generation rooted in cultural values, enabling individuals to remain deeply human in an increasingly complex, fast-changing world. In this spirit, the Foundation has launched a dedicated initiative to inculcate cultural awareness among children. This project aims to cultivate strong literary sensibilities by instilling a love for literature, art, and culture at an early age.
While English serves as a global lingua franca, authentic self-expression is most deeply realized through one’s mother tongue. Recognizing this, the Foundation is devoted to fostering and preserving Indian languages by promoting literary awareness and engagement across linguistic communities.
Literature, art, and culture are essential to nurturing humanity and sustaining social harmony. Upholding these values, the Foundation has envisioned long-term initiatives to digitally preserve classical works in Indian languages. Through digitization, it seeks to safeguard India’s rich literary heritage and ensure its accessibility for generations to come.
The Book Brahma Literature Festival has rapidly emerged as one of India’s pioneering literature festivals. Within just two years of its inception, #BBLF has evolved into the country’s largest Indian-language literature festival.
Across civilizations, two forces have most powerfully united societies: religion and language. Through literature, language has played a pivotal role in shaping civilizations and nurturing collective consciousness. South India stands as a compelling testament to this truth. With a literary history spanning more than 2,500 years, languages such as Kannada, Malayalam, Tamil, Telugu, Tulu, Kodava, Konkani, Byari, and many others have contributed immeasurably to creating one of the world’s richest literary landscapes—remarkable for both its depth and diversity.
Despite the extraordinary contributions of Tamil, Kannada, Malayalam, and Telugu to world literature—contributions that surpass those of many other languages globally—these traditions have long remained marginalised within the international literature festival circuit. This marginalization is not unique to South Indian languages; it reflects a broader neglect of Indian and other native languages worldwide. The hegemony of English, coupled with market-driven forces, has often obscured the vast literary wealth produced in mother tongues. Yet history repeatedly affirms that the most authentic, enduring, and transformative literature has always emerged—and continues to emerge—from native languages.
Recognizing this gap, the Book Brahma Foundation launched #BBLF in 2024. Conceived as a platform to unite the world through native languages, the festival seeks to bring people together through literature and to help build a more humane and meaningful society. In just two editions, #BBLF has already demonstrated the profound and lasting influence of Indian languages on world literature.

Final day of Book Brahma Literature Festival 2024: A celebration of south India’s literary excellence

Book Brahma Literature Festival 2024: A celebration of south Indian languages and cultural diversity

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