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Varsha Seshan

Dreamers

posted on August 2, 2021

Dreamers.What a beautiful title for a series of illustrated stories about children who dared to dream and then dared to live their dream. The first two books in the series are about light and song, and I found that quite lovely too.Richly illustrated with stark, contrasting colours, The Boy Who Played with Light and The Girl Who Loved to Sing are a visual treat.Shadows lurk everywhere, even as the young Satyajit Ray hunts for the light. He tries to draw them out; he runs from them; he watches them from corners. Until he discovers the magic of light and darkness and the beauty they create together.Satyajit Ray's story was lovely, but to be honest, I enjoyed Teejan Bai's story much more. Red, black and white come together to create powerful pictures, and I love the use of repetition. Jhunjhuni! Pagalpana! Teejan sings!'Teejan sings', especially, is such a powerful affirmation. How strange … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books, Children Tagged With: books for ages seven and eight, Dreamers, Lavanya Karthik, non-fiction, reading, review, The Boy Who Played with Light, The Girl Who Loved to Sing

Karma Meets a Zombie

posted on July 14, 2021

Karma Meets a Zombie is probably the most ambitious book I've chosen for my reading programme for ages nine and ten. I read Karma Fights a Monster some time ago and I loved it. I even wrote about it in an essay on monsters and stereotypes because I was struck by how unusual the monster is.Karma Meets a Zombie is a different kind of unusual. For instance, is the monster necessarily the antagonist? What makes someone a monster? And what does a monster hunter do, really?There are several reasons I call it an ambitious read for my book club. For one, no pictures! It's the first book we're reading together that has no inside illustrations.Two, I haven't touched upon horror as a theme at all so far, especially as I didn't read much horror as a child. (I did read a few Goosebumps because I won five of those for ... something. Now that I come to think of it, I … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books, Children, Workshops Tagged With: book club, bookish activities, books for ages nine and ten, Evan Purcell, Karma Meets a Zombie, online reading programme, reading, review

The Absolutely True Adventures of Daydreamer Dev

posted on July 13, 2021

Daydreaming! Sigh. You can be what you want to be. You can do what you want to do.And Dev is the ace daydreamer. In The Absolutely True Adventures of Daydreamer Dev, the boy embarks on three adventures. He climbs Mount Everest, travels along the Amazon and then across the Sahara. Each adventure is real to him, and so, of course, he has no time to pay attention to mundane things like school and marks. In fact, even when he is being told off by his father, he's off on another flight of fancy.Dev's stories are full of possibility, and that's why I chose to include them in my reading programme. Imagination has no limits; let's see how far-fetched we can get! What could it be? Look at the cover of The Absolutely True Adventures of Daydreamer Dev. There he is, lying on a Kwality Carpets carpet and dreaming. A carpet can take you on an adventure, can't … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books, Children, Workshops Tagged With: books for ages seven and eight, Ken Spillman, online reading programme, reading, review, The Absolutely True Adventures of Daydreamer Dev

Sandy to the Rescue

posted on July 6, 2021

Another reading programme, another delightful hOle book! I remember reading a YA book by Rupa Gulab, Daddy Come Lately, and I enjoyed it. How would a chapter book be?The answer? Lovely.Sandy, aka Sandip when his mother is angry, makes a new friend, Aftab, who needs rescuing from Mrs Gupta, the witch next door. The problem is that he needs to sneak Aftab into his house, feed him and give him a place to stay. And of course, Sandy has got to be braver than Aftab when it comes to an adventure of this sort. After all, Sandy is a whole year older.I'm sure this hOle book is going to be equally fun to read at my book club! Here are some bookish activities we're going to do. Making Up Words 'It's greeny blue, not bluey green. It's, um, grue!''You need spectacles,' Aftab scoffed. 'It's not grue, it's breen!'What words can you make up by combining two words? What … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books, Children, Workshops Tagged With: books for ages seven and eight, hOle books, online reading programme, reading, review, Rupa Gulab, Sandy to the Rescue

A Pinch of Magic

posted on June 25, 2021

Asha Nehemiah's Trouble with Magic was the very first book we read at my very first reading programme. And I loved it. So, when I learned that after all these years, there was a sequel ...Writing a sequel to a lovely book is challenging, even more challenging than writing a new book--because there are expectations. But A Pinch of Magic lives up to them.Let's begin with the blurb. It made me frown. How was it possible to write a whole book about a spoon? And then, as I read the book, I smiled and chuckled. Because yes, that's what A Pinch of Magic is about. Aunt Malu's special pinching spoon is broken, and she needs another. The premise is just that simple. And in Asha Nehemiah's grand, humorous style, we dive into a story about a spoon.There's so much I love about the story! I love how similar the first line of A Pinch of Magic is to the first line of Trouble with Magic. We … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books, Children Tagged With: A Pinch of Magic, Asha Nehemiah, books for ages seven and eight, Chapter Book, hOle books, reading, review

Nida Finds a Way

posted on June 23, 2021

I stare at my laptop screen, wondering how to write about Nida Finds a Way. It's such an important book. A book that makes me oh-so-curious about how a child would respond. What would children say that this story is about? Would they giggle and keep reading on and on to see how Nida balances her love for her anxious father and her need to climb trees, ride cycles and live?Children read what they want to read in stories, and I am always amazed by that. So, would children read Nida Finds a Way as a story about Shaheen Bagh? I somehow doubt it, and that's the reason why I think the book is so precious. As a child, I would have laughed at over-protective Abba, his NONONO, YESYESYES and his twitching beard. I would have been bothered to distraction about the illustration on page 24 where Abba's left arm is injured instead of his right. And I would have loved how Nida manages to sneak out … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books, Children Tagged With: books for ages seven and eight, Chapter Book, hOle books, reading, review

Five Picture Books I Recently Loved

posted on June 12, 2021

Once more, I've been so busy with so many things that I haven't had the time to read much or write. Each day, I spend such a large chunk of time planning what to do during my reading and writing sessions that I end up unwinding by doing something that rests my eyes, instead of taxing them some more! But picture books are an exception, aren't they? One Ted Falls Out of BedOne Ted Falls Out of Bed by Julia Donaldson and Anna Currey is a book about numbers written in a way that only Julia Donaldson can carry off. I am not usually a fan of books that also teach you something, but this one is such an imaginative adventure that I loved it! One teddy bear, two eyes, three mice ... This midnight escapade is lovely from start to end. Sadiq Wants to StitchI've wanted to read Sadiq Wants to Stitch written by Mamta Nainy and illustrated by Niloufer Wadia for a while … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: Bear Snores On, My No No No Day, One Ted Falls Out of Bed, picture books, reading, review, Sadiq Wants to Stitch, The Night Monster

What I’ve Been Reading on StoryWeaver

posted on June 6, 2021

Every so often, I write about books I've read on StoryWeaver that have left an impression on me in one way or another. Free books are precious! And over 30,000 free books? Priceless! Here are a few I read and loved recently.In the past, most of the books I've read have been Level 1 and Level 2 books, but somehow, in the last few months, I've been drawn to slightly longer books. Though I've divided them into broad themes, each story is more than just the theme I've chosen for it. FriendshipFriendship takes various forms, and, in some ways, perhaps most of the books on my list this time are about friendship. Goplu's Train Ride written by Timira Gupta and illustrated by Parmita Mukherjee explores that glorious moment of friendship that is full of possibility and yet, complete in itself. I love it. Can you make a friend through the bars of a local train? … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books, Children Tagged With: A Dog Called Shoo, Goplu's Train Ride, I Want to Ride a Motorbike, On Mondays I Want to Hide, picture books, Pratham Books, reading, review, Storyweaver, Sweet Memories of Gutar Goo, The Birthday Cake, You Won't Believe Me

The Tigers in the Tower

posted on June 5, 2021

I've lost track of the number of times I've written about Julia Golding's books - the Cat Royal series, the Peril trilogy, the Dragonfly trilogy, the Darcie Lock series ...And now, The Tigers in the Tower. I would not say it is my favourite work by Julia Golding - not even close - but I did enjoy it!Sahira, the protagonist of the story, is a little spitfire. She might be an orphan, but she's not going to be a meek little lamb, giving everything up to the greedy Mr Pence. Other adults try to be peacemakers, paying Mr Pence to calm troubled waters, but Sahira is riled up with the injustice of it all.However, as time rolls by, one hope after another is stripped away. How long can her temper and spirit keep her going? The bullies aren't just children; they're adults. And these adults wield power over Sahira's life. Even as the young girl makes friends, she learns that her … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: historical fiction, Julia Golding, Middle Grade Book, reading, review, The Tigers in the Tower

Mirror, Mirror

posted on May 31, 2021

Fat shaming. It's so rooted in society and family that it often goes unnoticed. Sometimes, it wears the garb of concern - oh, you've put on so much weight; is everything okay? At other times, it's downright cruel.Ananya, the protagonist of Mirror, Mirror, faces the second kind. The words she hears echo through her head, making her recoil with disgust when she looks at herself in the mirror. Miss Piggy. Fat cow. How did she never notice how fat and ugly she was? How could she have thought it was okay?Mirror Mirror was pacy from start to end. That is something I love about Andaleeb Wajid's writing: her books make you keep turning the pages, not noticing when one chapter ends and another begins. I found that with When She Went Away, which I read three years ago, and then again with Mirror, Mirror. While fat-shaming forms the centre of the story, the narrative steers away from … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: Andaleeb Wajid, Mirror Mirror, reading, review, Young Adult

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