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Varsha Seshan

I Wish, My Street, Timmi in Tangles

posted on January 20, 2021

January 2021 has already been so full of lovely things! I launched the second edition of my online reading programme, and I'm delighted that it came into being because parents of participants in my current programme wrote and asked if I would consider continuing the sessions. It was also a month when I received so many reader reviews of my books - take a look! What I've been reading In the meantime, of course, I've been reading. When am I not reading? But I haven't written much about what I've been reading because I was busy blogging about my best reads from last year. January is a month when I step back and look at the year that went by. I like to take time out to think about all the wonderful stories I read in the previous year and all the experiences I had with my writing, my workshops and my my dance. So, here's a post … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: I Wish, My Street, reading, reviews, Shals Mahajan, Storyweaver, Timmi in Tangles

Hungry to Read

posted on January 19, 2021

If there was one thing that could push you to read, what would that be? How would you get someone who doesn't like reading to read? When Arjun's teacher announces a competition in school, Arjun is thrilled - until he learns that it is a reading competition. He is no reader; he likes logic, facts and all things mathematical. The problem is that the prize is so attractive that Arjun is tempted. The question, though, is how far he is willing to go to help his class to win. The reasons I chose Hungry to Read for my reading programme are very different from the reasons I chose every other book. More than having enjoyed the book, I love the possibilities it has when it comes to activities and conversations. Here is some of what I will do with the book. Scavenger hunt I love book scavenger hunts! We'll do a quick one with this book, simply to start a conversation on the different … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books, Children, Workshops Tagged With: Arti Sonthalia, books for ages seven and eight, Hungry to Read, online reading programme, reading, reading workshop

Ahimsa

posted on January 18, 2021

Ahimsa has been on my TBR list for a long time and finally, it was my first read of 2021. What a lovely, lovely book. When I started reading it, I was a little puzzled. We've studied about the independence struggle several times in school. We know about Gandhi, his fasts, the swadeshi and boycott movements and his call for ahimsa or non-violence. We know about freedom fighters having been imprisoned and about the Hindu-Muslim riots that erupted all over the country. There seemed to be nothing new in Ahimsa, nothing that would make readers everywhere to talk about the book for so long. And then, Ahimsa went on to be so much more. We do know about social reformists and about Gandhi moving from the word Untouchable to the word Harijan. Ahimsa goes deeper. Was Harijan an acceptable word to people who felt rejected by the god that supposedly created the caste system? Was change even … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: Ahimsa, Middle Grade Book, reading, review, Supriya Kelkar

Lucky Girl

posted on January 16, 2021

Lucky Girl is a hilarious book. It's imaginative, wacky and full of surprises. Sumi is a lucky girl. With her pink bed, a window that overlooks the sea, soft toys and a chef for a mother, she must be a lucky girl, right? Wrong. As I chuckled my way through this hOle book written by Shabnam Minwalla and illustrated by Tanvi Bhat, I knew I had to work with it at my reading programme! Here are a few things I plan to do with the book. Funny recipes Pammi Gupta makes pumpkin peel muffins and furry leaf parathas for Sumi. Yuck! What kinds of things would you put together to make an imaginative meal? Would you eat the things you can see on the cover of the book? Once you know what the ingredients are, would you still eat them? Poetry Sumi takes part in a poetry writing competition organised by Fab Foods. Her friend Priya wants to write one kind of poem while she wants to … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books, Workshops Tagged With: books for ages seven and eight, hOle books, Lucky Girl, online reading programme, reading, reading programme, reading workshop, Shabnam Minwalla

My Year in Workshops – 2020

posted on January 8, 2021

2020 was a tough year, such a tough year that it's become rather redundant to say it. Many of us had to step out of our comfort zones and do things differently.For me, of course, it was no different. For several years now, workshops have been my prime source of income. I've had my writers' club at St. Mary's School, teacher training sessions for Ratna Sagar, and the odd workshop here and there with libraries. When my fifth year at the Writers' Club came to an end in February last year (was it really not even a year ago?), I was all set for a short vacation, before getting to work again. April and June are often busy months at Ratna Sagar. I conduct teacher training sessions all over the country, and so, I usually find myself travelling and working right through these months with few breaks in the middle. In fact, I already had workshops scheduled for May and June, so I was making plans … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Workshops Tagged With: creative writing, reading, Workshops for Adults, workshops for children

Top 14 Picture Books I Read in 2020

posted on January 7, 2021

I read so many picture books each year that I'm sure I've missed out at least a few that I read and loved in 2020. Also, I find it difficult to review picture books in detail, so this is just a list, with links to earlier posts I wrote about the books, or, in the case of books I read on StoryWeaver, links to the books themselves. The Manasa Series I love meeting the same character again and again, so the Manasa series is special!Manasa Finds a RainbowA Hairy ProblemWho's That in the Mirror? Art is Everywhere Imaginative and fun - I love all three books in this series too!Art is Everywhere - Here, There and in Everyday ObjectsArt is Everywhere - Here, There and in FoodArt is Everywhere - Here, There and in Trash More Books on StoryWeaver This is a random assortment, including a wordless picture book and one book in Hindi!Ikru's First Day of … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: picture books, reading, reviews

Top Six Young Adult Books I Read in 2020

posted on January 5, 2021

I've already shared two lists of books, but I think it's important to say - again - that reading levels differ widely, and in multiple ways. For instance, I know that as a child, my linguistic level (in English) was higher than that of some of my peers, but I often read books for children who were younger. I was still reading what was clearly children's literature, while friends of mine had 'graduated' to murder, romance and thrillers. A list of any kind must be taken with a pinch of salt, and this one is no different.With that out of the way, here are six young adult books I read and loved last year. Ben's parents want to conduct an experiment. They want to study different aspects of the same thing - his father is a behavioural scientist who is convinced that chimpanzees can learn a human language if the environment is conducive, and Ben's mother is writing a … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: Broken Soup, Elizabeth Laird, Half Brother, Jenny Valentine, Kenneth Oppel, Moonrise, Nomads Land, Paro Anand, reading, reviews, Sarah Crossan, The Surprising Power of a Good Dumpling, Wai Chim, Welcome to Nowhere

Half Brother

posted on December 8, 2020

Book cover Text: Half Brother Kenneth Oppel Printz Honor-winning author of Airborn Image: Silhouettes of a family - father, mother, child and chimp

About a year ago, I read Kenneth Oppel's The Boundless. I did enjoy it, but it wasn't a book that wowed me. I read it, quite liked it and moved on. That's why Half Brother was not high on my list of books to read. I knew I would read it, but it sat on my shelf for a bit, while I read other books, including Nomad's Land and To Night Owl from Dogfish. And then, Half Brother made me sob the way only the best books can. Just like Pig Heart Boy, it raises all kinds of questions - about experiments on animals and human selfishness. Thirteen-year-old Ben's father is a behavioural scientist. He is convinced that chimps, being closest to humans, can be taught to use language to communicate. And he's determined to prove it. Ben's mother, who is doing her thesis on cross-fostering, is delighted with the experiment. They bring home and eight-day old chimpanzee, whom they call Zan, and begin … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: Half Brother, Kenneth Oppel, reading, review

To Night Owl From Dogfish

posted on November 30, 2020

Book cover Text: To Night Owl from Dogfish Holly Goldberg Sloan & Meg Wolitzer New York Times Bestselling Authors Image: Illustration of an owl in a triangle and, upside down, a dogfish in a triangle

I love epistolary novels. I think I've always loved them; they intrigue me. Off the top of my head, I think about Dear Mrs Naidu, Ketchup Clouds, Daddy Long-Legs and The Night Diary, though I'm sure I'll think of several more by the time I finish writing this blog post. To Night Owl from Dogfish is right up there with the best of them. It's crazy, full of laugh-out-loud humour, and poignant (yes, I did cry over it). Dogfish, aka Bett, loves snooping on her father. She checks his email and discovers that he is in a relationship with Avery's father, Sam Bloom. In fact, the relationship is so serious that they want their daughters to get to know each other. Bett writes to Night Owl, aka Avery. It's a crisis. They don't want two families to become one! They're happy by themselves and determined to cast a spoke in their fathers' wheels. In the way of stories - and real life - … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: Holly Goldberg Sloan, Meg Wolitzer, Middle-Grade Fiction, reading, review, To Night Owl from Dogfish

The Sheep-Pig

posted on November 29, 2020

A few months ago, one of my publishers, Mango Books, began a series of posts on social media about books authors read when they were young. The book I chose was The Sheep-Pig, a delightful chapter book by a favourite writer, Dick King-Smith. Dick King-Smith's stories are a treat. I loved The Sheep-Pig, the sequel Ace and so many more - Saddlebottom, A Mouse Called Wolf, The Hodgeheg ... Every time I went to the library, I would look out for his books, hoping to discover at least one more book I hadn't read. Why is this book part of my reading programme? Obviously, the first reason is that I love it. Here's what I said to Mango Books about it. "The Sheep-Pig is a delightful story, and I'm so glad I read it as a child! The book left me with the feeling that anything is possible. More than that, I loved the idea that kindness and courtesy can help you achieve … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books, Workshops Tagged With: Dick King-Smith, online reading programme, reading, reading programme, review, The Sheep-Pig

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