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Varsha Seshan

Number the Stars

posted on September 20, 2020

What does it mean to be brave? And how can we help one another to be brave?Number the Stars is a beautiful work of historical fiction set in Denmark during the second world war.I love historical fiction that comes alive to me. Some time ago, I wrote about ten works of middle-grade historical fiction set in ten different places, and if I had to rewrite the piece, I would add Number the Stars to the list.Annemarie, who lives with her family in Copenhagen, knows stories about courage, but she is sure that if her bravery is ever tested, she will fall short of the mark. Other people are brave, not she. In tales about the Resistance and stories about their beloved king, people are brave. Not she.However, just before the Jewish New Year, the rabbi announces that Jewish homes will be raided. Annemarie's neighbours, the Rosens, must flee. Young Ellen comes to stay with … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books, Children Tagged With: historical fiction, Lois Lowry, Middle-Grade Fiction, Number the Stars, reading, review

One Crazy Summer

posted on September 9, 2020

I took a while to get sucked into One Crazy Summer. I was intrigued, yes, both by the setting and by the characters. Yet, I needed more. I wanted to like the characters, which I could not really do--also because you're not meant to.Delphine, Vonetta and Fern go to Oakland to visit their mother Cecile. Cecile is unwelcoming--she does not want them there, she never asked them to come, and she makes it clear that they must stay out of her way. Delphine, the eleven-year-old narrator, is shocked that she does not even call herself Cecile anymore. She is a poet, Nzila, actively involved with the Black Panthers, and she sends them off for a summer camp where they can get free breakfast and stay occupied all day.It is a turbulent time and Delphine is more than a little nervous. She is supposed to take care of her sisters, but how is she supposed to do that when her mother sends them away … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: historical fiction, One Crazy Summer, reading, review, Rita Williams-Garcia

Secrets of a Sun King

posted on February 13, 2020

The first book I read by Emma Carroll was The Girl Who Walked on Air, and I loved it enough for it to have been one of the top ten middle-grade books I read in 2018. As a child, I devoured Galliano's Circus and I picked up the book with nothing in mind other than the fun of exploring another, different circus.When I saw Secrets of a Sun King at Lightroom, a delightful children's bookstore in Bengaluru, I recognised Emma Carroll's name and after a very slight hesitation, I decided to pick it up. I'm glad I did.In the Q&A section at the end of the book, Emma Carroll talks of the challenges of writing a book about Tutankhamen. The boy king is shrouded in intrigue, and countless stories have been written about and around him. The young pharaoh's tomb revealed unimaginable treasures, and incredibly, the boy's heart is missing. That forms the seed of all kinds of stories, doesn't … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: Emma Carroll, historical fiction, reading, review, Secrets of a Sun King

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