NRIworld.com
named Melvin a "Trendsetter" for his "outstanding talent" for
humor writing, describing him as a humorist "who's not only able
to see the lighter side of almost everything, but can also put
his insights into the most readable and side-splitting anecdotes."
Melvin was born in the town of Tisaiyanvillai,
in the southern state of Tamil Nadu, India, and spent much of
his childhood learning how to pronounce "Tisaiyanvillai". (He still
hasn't quite got the hang of it.)
He grew up in Zambia,
Central Africa, where he attended Kansenshi Primary and Secondary
Schools in Ndola, and Kamwala Secondary School in Lusaka. Both
his parents, Mrs. Hepzy Durai and the late I.V. Durai, were math teachers
and, as a result, Melvin grew up hating math.
Melvin
moved to the U.S. for college in 1982. He attended Messiah College in Grantham, Pennsylvania, where he
double-majored in Accounting and Natural Science, giving him the
unique ability to file tax returns for hamsters. Then he earned
an MBA from York College of Pennsylvania,
before following his heart and enrolling in the journalism program
at Towson State University in Maryland. He loved it and did well
enough to land a job at the
Chambersburg, Pa., Public
Opinion, the best and most
widely read newspaper in the entire town of Chambersburg. (Motto:
We're better than that rag in Waynesboro.)
He
was a business reporter for three years and a general assignment
reporter for another three, writing about everything from the "Best
Cow" at the county fair to the "Best Pig" at the state fair. He especially enjoyed writing feature stories
and won two first-place feature writing awards in the Best of
Gannett
contest, as well as an Outstanding
Achievement in Writing Award in 1998, earning himself half as
much adulation in the county as the "Best Cow."
In
early 1994, on a whim, Melvin wrote a humor column about women
wearing men's underwear as tops. He was amazed by the positive
response, not realizing that people outside the newsroom read
the editorial page. In 1995, he began writing the column every week and
found that he enjoyed it tremendously. He hopes to write humor for the rest of his life,
or as long as his wife lets him.
In
2001, Melvin completed his third master's degree, in English,
from Shippensburg University
in Pennsylvania, where he wrote three short stories for his thesis.
One of his stories, "Salvation," was published by The
Minnesota Review, a literary magazine, causing much laughter
in the literary world.
His
lovely wife, Malathi
Raghavan, is a doctor of veterinary
medicine and
research scientist, a very smart woman who somehow agreed to marry
him on Oct. 7, 2000, raising suspicion among his friends that she is
secretly conducting animal research on him.
They are the proud parents of two daughters, Lekha and Divya, and a
son, Rahul. They currently live in Winnipeg, Canada.
Melvin's mother, a longtime teacher in Zambia and Transkei, South Africa, retired
in 1997 and lives in Lansdale, Pennsylvania, with his sister,
Irene. Irene and her husband, Santosh, have three children, Sunil,
Supriya and Reena. Melvin's cousin,
Rani
Jeyaraj, who also grew up in
Zambia, is a former Miss. World finalist who works in India's
advertising industry.