Kshemendra was born into an old, cultured, and affluent family. His father was Prakashendra, a descendant of Narendra who was the minister to Jayapida. Both his education and literary output were broad and varied. He studied literature under "the foremost teacher of his time, the celebrated
Shaiva philosopher and literary exponent
Abhinavagupta". Kshemendra was born a Shaiva, but later became a Vaishnava. He studied and wrote about both
Vaishnavism and
Buddhism. His son, Somendra, provides details about his father in his introduction to the
Avadana Kalpalata and other works. Kshemendra refers to himself in his works as Vyasadasa (;
Slave of Vyasa), a title which was perhaps won or adopted after the completion of his . Kshemendra was in great demand as a skilled abridger of long texts. His literary career extended from at least 1037 (his earliest dated work,
Brihatkathāmanjari, a verse summary of the lost
Northwestern Bṛhatkathā; itself a recension of
Gunadhya's lost
Bṛhatkathā — "Great Story") to 1066 (his latest dated work,
Daśavataracharita, "an account of the ten incarnations of the god "). ==Extant works==