A workshop at the other end of town now!This one does not revolve just around reading; it's about word-building. How good is your vocabulary? How quickly can you think of words everyone knows? How easily can you express yourself?Join me for a weekend workshop at JustBooks, Aundh!Dates: 23rd and 24th August, 2014 Time: 10:30 am - 12:30 pm Registration fee: Rs. 500 Age-group: 8-12 years Contact: (020)69336944 or 7385022201 … [Read more...]
Storytelling on Independence Day
I'm conducting a free storytelling session on Independence Day!Venue: Friends Library, Salunke Vihar Road, Pune Time: 6 pm to 7 pm Age-group: 5-8 years … [Read more...]
Esty’s Gold
I never stay up reading. I love books and I enjoy reading, but staying up beyond my bed-time? No, that's not me. I remember when I was reading the fifth Harry Potter, I had one chapter left to finish and I went to sleep, to the horror of some of my friends. Maybe that was because I wanted to hold on to my fictional friends a little longer.Esty's Gold forced me to stay up reading. I read page after page. Just one more chapter. And one more. This chapter was too short to count. So just one more. And I stopped when I finished the book.The characters grew and changed. The story was layered with unselfconscious girlish giggling and the singularly quirky humour. I experienced each of the class struggles and felt the starkness of life in Ireland and Australia.It is difficult to create a character like Esty. In some ways, she is a shadow of Scarlett from Gone with the Wind. Yet, she is … [Read more...]
Tilly’s Moonlight Fox
When I started reading Tilly's Moonlight Fox, I did not quite like it. Both the story and the writing style seemed outdated. The kind of finish that so many new books have was not there.But the book grew on me. It's the kind of book that you should read when you are eight or nine years old, growing up on books like Anne of Green Gables and The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. There are no complex twists in the plot. There is nothing that keeps you waiting with bated breath. But it is a charming book nonetheless.The story of a girl who finds it difficult to fit in, Tilly's Moonlight Fox is one that is perhaps easily forgotten, but charms you while you are reading it. Just like a fairy-tale. … [Read more...]
Read Something New!
Back to British Library with my next reading workshop!Dates: 17th August, 24th August, 7th September and 14th September Time: 3 pm - 5 pm Age-group: 9-12 Registration fee: Rs. 1,200 for members; Rs. 2,200 for non-membersĀ (You get a complimentary Gold 6-month membership free when you register)See you there! … [Read more...]
Small Change for Stuart
When crossword puzzles, triplets and magic come together, the combination is a delightful mixture of commonsense, logic and madness. Small Change for Stuart is about a very short boy with slightly crazy parents. The parents do not realise that their short son is going to be traumatised through life because his first initial and surname invite a nickname that he has to live with - S. Horten.Moving to the tiny village of Beeton, Stuart is lost. He has no friends yet because he cannot count the irritating triplets next door called April, May and June. Stuart does, however, have the prospect of a great-uncle who disappeared during the second world war. Stuart follows his great-uncle Tony's treasure-trail and discovers many things. The reader - especially the adult reader - winces at his mistakes and then marvels at his triumphs.Full of puns, wordplay and wry humour, Small Change … [Read more...]
The Famous Adventures of Jack
When a little girl called Jill is told that she has to meet Jack, she begins a wonderful journey of stories with Mother Greenwood and a few Jacks here and there.The Famous Adventures of Jack by Berlie Doherty is a collection of new tales that have the same charm, predictability and comfort of well-loved classics.With Jack the Giant-Killer, Jack's magical snuff-box and Daft Jack, the book is packed to the brim with familiar, old-world stories that are utterly new. It's almost like taking a quilt you love and stitching it into different patterns that are just as beautiful! … [Read more...]
The Feeling After Reading a Good Book
I sit on the sofa looking at the wall in front of me. Hundreds of images cover the wall.A young brown girl. The book does not say anywhere that she is brown. In fact, she is English. But her great-great-aunt - or was it another relation? - used to wash the socks of tramps. An old king has a friend who speaks five languages. He is a fantastic man who takes children out all the time. The progressive school. Imagine being in whatever lessons you like, if you like. A cedar tree. I don't even know what a cedar tree is.Scenes from the book play on my mind-reel. Conversations. Abstract ideas.I am not sitting in a sofa dressed in my night clothes. I am out in a world about which I know nothing. I am soaring over the mountains thinking about how very glad I am that the Prince of Bergania is so different from the Prince of Transjordania.And then someone walks into the room and frowns at … [Read more...]
Ashadi Ekadashi at Prashanthi Nilayam
Standing there, behind the backdrop, we held our breath. We had been working with 43 Bal Vikas children with little or no knowledge of dance since May, and this was the outcome of all our efforts. Working towards the performance for Ashadi Ekadashi at Prashanthi Nilayam was often frustrating, but ultimately, deeply rewarding. The children had practised just once at the final venue - the day before the programme. We finished practice around 10:30 at night and then the children got up at 3 in the morning for their make-up because all of them had to be ready by 7.Contending against all odds, it happened.In a flurry of movement backstage, we changed their costumes, changed their hair-dos and helped with their jewellery and make-up. But they did it. People were moved to tears. People came up to us over and over again to thank us.Hats off to the children whose faith pushed … [Read more...]
The Story of Cirrus Flux
"Where are you, Varsha?" "I'm not here!" I call back. "It looks like you are." "No, I'm inside here." (pointing to my book)That's the way it was with The Story of Cirrus Flux. I enjoyed the ride through 18th century England, with Matthew Skelton's small liberties with historical facts.I wondered again at how far science has come, but how cruel the human race is.We're such a bunch of contraries. We are capable of great kindness and great cruelty. We are capable of infinite selflessness and inhuman selfishness. We want revenge, but want to forgive. We go to any lengths for people we love.The Story of Cirrus Flux, while making you gasp and shiver, also has all these contraries melting together. … [Read more...]

