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Varsha Seshan

Exploring the World of Stories: A Reading Workshop for Children

posted on May 11, 2014

Summer holidays! Time for yet another reading workshop! I'm moving to another library now - Friends Library, Salunke Vihar Road Mark the dates: 19th May - 23rd May 2014 Age-group: 8-12 years Time: 10 am - 11:30 am Registration fee: Rs. 750 Join the fun! Let's explore the world of stories! … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Children, Workshops Tagged With: reading, story, workshop

Five Problems with Good Books

posted on May 7, 2014

1) I forget that I'm a writer. I pick up Harry Potter determined to see how J.K. Rowling weaves the magic she weaves. I decide that I will look at her techniques, the way she gets me involved in the story and how she slides in her humour. Five chapters - that's all it takes to get me so engrossed that I want to know what happens next (even though I know what happens next) and I don't look at anything else. 2) I sometimes (often?) imagine meeting my favourite characters and talking to them - and then become woefully depressed when I realise I cannot. Anne Shirley - I want to meet her, I want her to be my kindred spirit, my bosom friend (even if I come second to Diana Barry). I want to visit Avonlea and walk Birch Path with her. I want to share the joy of the Lake of Shining Waters with her. Why can't I? 3) I postpone everything. I can write later. I can work later. I can sleep later. … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books, Writing Tagged With: reading

Last Day to Vote

posted on May 6, 2014

Somehow, seeing my book cover on Rivokids's shortlist for the Parents Kids Choice Awards makes it all the more real. Thank you, those who voted. And thank you, all those who shared the link. Those who didn't, would you do it now please? Voting closes today! … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books, Children Tagged With: award, parents kids choice awards, reading, story, story-catcher

International Dance Day

posted on April 29, 2014

It's International Dance Day! The best day, perhaps, to pay tribute to my guru, Guru Mythili Raghavan. Nobody can quite understand why she means so much to us. Why is it that we spend odd hours at her place? Why do so many of the seniors' parents comment that we listen more to her than to our own parents? Why is there still (after 20 years) that fear mingled with respect when we have to tell Miss that we are not coming for class? Maybe it has something to do with the fact that her house has been open to us at odd hours for us to practise and outdo ourselves. In her absence, I have ransacked her cupboard for costumes. In her presence, I have climbed into the loft to pull equipment out. Miss has seen us laugh and cry. She has witnessed and been part of our greatest successes and failures. How can we not love her? She has been deeply involved with our lives, rejoicing in our victories, … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Dance Tagged With: academy, art, Bharatanatyam, reading

Fun 4 Kids

posted on April 25, 2014

It's workshop season! The Cultural Centre, Pune, is a new space in Mundhwa for different activities and programmes. "Fun 4 Kids" is a venture into a range of activities for children. I will be facilitating the 'Literature' activities with reading and writing workshops once a month. The poster says it all! … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Children, Workshops Tagged With: English, reading, the cultural centre pune

The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe

posted on April 19, 2014

"How about watching The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe?" a friend's mother suggested when I was about eleven. I giggled. "What a funny name! What is that?" "You mean you haven't read The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe?" Eyes wide open in amazement. And that is how I came to watch the old BBC movie before I read the book. I was so taken with it that as soon as the movie got over and I went to 'play' in the evening, I told my sister and my bestest friend the whole story, bit by bit. Even now, when I reread the book, the impression of the movie was so powerful that I read Jadis's voice exactly like the movie I watched when I was eleven. "How dare you come alone?" "Turkish Delight for my little prince?" "You... Fool...!" What a powerful movie! What a grand book! I've finished rereading The Magician's Nephew and The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. The Silver Chair, here I … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books, Children, Movie Tagged With: reading, review

The Red Dress

posted on April 18, 2014

As a child, I did not like anything about anything awkward. I did not like dirt (even though I asked my father where the Famous Five went to the loo and how they had baths when they went camping). I did not find 'dirty' humour funny, even humour aimed at children. I liked politeness and neatness in all. No burping, no rude signs or gestures, nothing. The Red Dress is one of those books I certainly would not have liked as a child. Even now, I find that I cannot quite understand why ugly things find their way into literature. From where does this need to be 'true' to reality come? Smelly chicken rotting in the heat, worms of snot - why do I need to know? Yet, I liked the story-line. Engagingly written, The Red Dress made me continue reading despite my quarrels with it. The realistic elements did not change the fact that there are sudden, unexpected character changes and movements from an … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books, Children Tagged With: reading, review

Hello? Is Anybody There?

posted on April 15, 2014

If you go to the moon, you would go up. But when you reach the moon, you land. You go down. And if you are on the moon and you look up, you will see the earth. That means that somewhere between here and the moon, up becomes down and down becomes up. I started reading Sophie's World when I was about twelve. I was impressed and intrigued - but I could not finish reading it. There was just too much intensity that I was not prepared to deal with. Perhaps if I had read Hello? Is Anybody There? first, I would have tried harder with Sophie's World. At first glance, Hello? Is Anybody There? is a bit like The Little Prince. At second glance, it still is, and in a good way. It is a book that reminds us that the question is far more important than the answer. It is a beautiful journey into our minds and our realities. I am sure that every time I read it, I will take something else out of the … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books, Children Tagged With: reading, review

Shadow Web

posted on April 14, 2014

Everybody in the internet age does it at least once in a while. Type in 'Varsha Seshan', just to see what pops up. Don't tell me you haven't searched for yourself on Google. Jessica Allendon did just that. And the consequences were totally out of control. Shadow Web is not about time-travel. Time-travel is easy. You go back in time, but you know something about the history of the place. But what if you find yourself in a parallel world within the same time-space fabric? What can you do then? I delighted in Shadow Web. It opened out to me possibilities of imagination and storytelling, ideas of parallel histories and dangers. Sometimes, I wonder (perhaps all of us wonder) what it is to be myself. What or who am I? This is nothing compared to the question of what I am without my socio-cultural background. The same 'me' with the same parents in the same city - where everything is … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: reading, review

Avameru

posted on April 12, 2014

I began to read the book and licked my lips, wondering what I could say about it. A book by a dear friend can be a dangerous thing because you must have an opinion about it. With Avameru, the opinion was easy. I enjoyed it. Yes, in the beginning, I had thoughts in my head about how it was somehow not my kind of book. I don't read 'Young Adult' - perhaps that was why it wasn't appealing. Et cetera et cetera. And then I finished the first fifty pages. When I looked next, I had finished the book. Pacy, exciting and engaging, Avameru brought to me a blend of adventure and energy that I love. Most importantly, it places story above all else. Story comes first. When the story catches your fancy and makes you want to know what happens next, you know you're hooked. And this happened to me with Avameru despite the fact that I had already read the original (hand-written) manuscript. I enjoyed … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: Aditya Sahni, reading, review

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