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© Copyright 2013 - 2025
Varsha Seshan

Surprise Interview

July 24, 2013 by Varsha Seshan Leave a Comment

I never have call waiting turned on. Yesterday, somehow I did. An unknown number was calling me as I spoke to a very dear friend – a landline number. At first, I ignored it. I got another call. I was puzzled. And another. So I took it. “Varsha Seshan!” said the voice at the other […]

Filed Under: Books, Children Tagged With: radio, radio one, review, story, story-catcher

Monsters University

June 27, 2013 by Varsha Seshan Leave a Comment

When humour, action, plot, story, character and setting are all rolled into one, how can I not leave the cinema hall smiling like I have a tummy full of food and am ready to sleep? Monsters University made me happy.  Why should anyone (particularly me) pretend to write a review? I like Mike (and Sullivan). I […]

Filed Under: Children Tagged With: cinema, movie, review

The Lost Years

June 25, 2013 by Varsha Seshan Leave a Comment

When I first read Mary Higgins Clark, I remember how amazed I was. All Around the Town remains one of the most powerful books of all time in my memory. Yet, when I read this, there was the sense of something artificial. As craft, detective fiction shines. I enjoyed the intricacy of the narrative. Romance within a […]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: review

Stormswift

June 20, 2013 by Varsha Seshan Leave a Comment

Madeleine Brent, ah, Madeleine Brent. So many of your books are based on the same thing – an English girl in a foreign land, falling in love with an Englishman under impossible circumstances. How is it that I love them all? The power of the narrative just gripped me right through the book. A sense […]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: review

Walkabout

June 19, 2013 by Varsha Seshan Leave a Comment

Unbelievably moving. Two English children in the middle of the Australian desert – what are their chances of survival? But they come across a bush boy. A naked dark-skinned Aborigine. They cannot communicate to one another, but they have to because the ‘darkie’s’ attitude towards them is simple. He will not judge. Everyone is together […]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: review

The Moneylender’s Daughter

June 18, 2013 by Varsha Seshan Leave a Comment

I often shy away from thick books. I’m not quite sure why because I have read (more than once) and enjoyed (tremendously) books like Gone with the Wind, Jane Eyre and Pride and Prejudice. Maybe, somehow, classics escape my prejudices. But books like The Moneylender’s Daughter ought to as well. As I began the book and got […]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: reading, review, The Moneylender's Daughter, V.A. Richardson

Magical Mail

June 14, 2013 by Varsha Seshan Leave a Comment

‘Dear Sir or Madam,My name is Thor. I would like to work for the council recycling department. I think I would be good at this as I have lightning for melting and a big hammer for those items that are difficult to crush. I have passed an exam in art and I am also a […]

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

The Poison Garden

June 13, 2013 by Varsha Seshan Leave a Comment

I finally finished reading The Poison Garden only because I forced myself to. I turned page after deliberate page, skipping sections, skimming over larger sections and wondering who would read the book. And then, I had a rather startling thought. I understand where the inspiration comes from. I understand a fascination for plants and power […]

Filed Under: Books, Children Tagged With: review

The Harry Potter Phenomenon

June 5, 2013 by Varsha Seshan Leave a Comment

“You must read Harry Potter,” a friend of mine told me when I was in the eighth standard. I glanced at the book lying on her desk and nodded. The book she was so impressed by was not yet available easily in India. A relative had given it to her and she was passing it on. I […]

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

The Great Gatsby

May 30, 2013 by Varsha Seshan 3 Comments

Is it fair to compare a book with a movie? Especially a book with such a strong narrative voice? I was a little put-off by the idea of Nick talking to the doctor. But then, that was one way of getting the narrative voice loud and clear, I guess. It was exactly like the book […]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: cinema, movie, review

Faerie Heart

May 27, 2013 by Varsha Seshan Leave a Comment

Incredible. As a child, I did not like novels that were not divided into chapters. I have no idea why. The only exception was Mary Poppins. I somehow think this one would have been an exception too. What a visual treat! The imagination just blew me over. A coverlet and a bed made of insects’ […]

Filed Under: Books, Children Tagged With: fantasy, imagination, review

Oranges in No Man’s Land

May 22, 2013 by Varsha Seshan Leave a Comment

I find that so may writers seem to have a compulsion to write long, complex, layered work. So many new books are thick paperbacks, full of things happening on every page. Oranges in No Man’s Land is not like that. Not at all. Elizabeth Laird manages to write a beautiful, heart-warming story in the course of […]

Filed Under: Books, Children Tagged With: Elizabeth Laird, Oranges in No Mans Land, reading, review

Apricots at Midnight

January 25, 2013 by Varsha Seshan Leave a Comment

Many would say that Apricots at Midnight is an outdated book: old-fashioned and preachy. Yet, the simple childlike stories made it altogether loveable. Imagine a patchwork quilt, in which each little bit of cloth has a story to tell. I wish I had one! Apricots at Midnight has the sense of a collection of stories, united by this […]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: British Library, reading, review

Reflex

January 24, 2013 by Varsha Seshan Leave a Comment

If I don’t read, I can’t write. It’s as simple as that. My mother introduced me to Dick Francis years ago, and I never imagined I would like more than one odd book about jockeys. I’m not horse-mad, and I don’t like the idea of horse races. It’s a lifestyle about which I know nothing. […]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: reading, review

The Ant Colony

January 16, 2013 by Varsha Seshan Leave a Comment

Books that I’ve loved and re-read time and time again have nearly always emphasised character over plot. Take, for example, Anne, Emily, Little Lord Fauntleroy and the little princess. There’s something about character that just warms me, perhaps because it’s like discovering a friend, rather than having an experience. Stories with exciting plots are certainly […]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: Jenny Valentine, reading, review, The Ant Colony

My Name is Rose

December 12, 2012 by Varsha Seshan Leave a Comment

I could say that Smarties Gold Medal winning author Sally Grindley’s book is about a Romanian gypsy being integrated into a dysfunctional recomposed English family. Orphaned during a road accident, she has to find her way into the affections of a money-hungry man, an attention-seeking girl and a guilt-ridden woman. She has to surmount the […]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: gypsy, reading, review, Romania, Sally Grindley

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