Eleven-year-old Viji has had enough. Her mother might believe that her father is repentant and will stop abusing her. But when he hits Viji and Rukku, she makes a decision. However harsh life on the streets may be, it is preferable to being home with a drunken, abusive father. And so, Viji takes her sister Rukku away, determined to find a place where she can be safe. Amongst untrustworthy adults and bullies, she finds friends who are better than family. She finds home.The Bridge Home is a story of grit and love, of finding home outside home. As a creative writing trainer, I thought about it as a mentor text too, a wonderful example of how well a story told in second person can work. Viji tells the story as if she is talking to her little sister Rukku. We hear every emotion in her voice--her longing, her regret and the depth of her love. Everything that she does is with Rukku in … [Read more...]
Born Behind Bars
Just like Fish in a Tree and Counting by 7s, I got around to reading Born Behind Bars by Padma Venkatraman thanks to the NLF Reading Challenge. There's just so much lovely literature out there just waiting to be read!I was a little sceptical about reading Born Behind Bars, though. I'm not a fan of very dark, upsetting middle-grade literature. For instance, even though I found One for the Murphys gripping, it was too much for me. It's emotional, well-told, powerful - but there's just too much darkness there. I like heart-wrenching stories, but not that heart-wrenching.And the premise of Born Behind Bars felt similar. A child born in prison and let out alone because he's too old to stay in jail with his mother? I wouldn't normally pick up a book if that was all I knew about it. Yet, during the conversation with the author, more than once, I got a sense of hope, of positivity. … [Read more...]


