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© Copyright 2013 - 2026
Varsha Seshan

A Time to Dance

posted on April 29, 2026

I went back to a novel in verse after a long time with A Time to Dance by Padma Venkatraman. It's a lovely tale of grit and ambition, about finding one's path and learning what it is to be a dancer. More than once, I had a pebble in my throat as I read Veda's story of discovery and rejoiced in the way she discovers and defines herself. Veda's mother doesn't want her to dance. She would rather her daughter spent time on more useful, lucrative things, like mathematics. But Veda knows what she wants, and her father and grandmother support her, celebrating her wins and urging her towards excellence. And then, Veda suffers a nightmarish accident. She wakes up to discover that her leg has been amputated from the knee down. Her dreams come crashing down around her, and worst of all, her dance teacher Uday Anna counsels her to choose another path. What follows is a journey of … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: A Time to Dance, Padma Venkatraman, reading, review, Young Adult

The Bridge Home

posted on March 9, 2025

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...]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: books for tweens, Middle Grade, Padma Venkatraman, reading, review, The Bridge Home

Born Behind Bars

posted on August 23, 2022

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...]

Filed Under: Books, Children Tagged With: Born Behind Bars, Middle-Grade Fiction, Padma Venkatraman, reading, review