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Varsha Seshan

Wildwitch Wildfire

posted on March 24, 2019

Wildwitch Wildfire. The name seems to hark back to an earlier time, a time when magic was different, ancient, unknown. Yet, the cover, with its bright red, and a cat staring a girl down gave me the idea of something almost modern. I picked it up, curious about what it would offer--and put it down when I had finished reading it.Wildwitch Wildfire won me over with the wonder of its storytelling. A beautiful story, simply told - is there anything more fulfilling than that?Clara Ash is mauled by a huge cat on her way to school, but that's hardly an excuse she can offer her scary math teacher for being late. With an incident that simple, the story begins.Clara's mum never cries, but when she hears about the cat, she begins to cry. It is time for Clara, little Clara Mouse, to visit her Aunt Isa, a wildwitch. For Clara is a wildwitch herself and needs to learn how to … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: Lene Kaaberbol, reading, review, Wildwitch Wildfire

Septopus: Trouble on the High Cs

posted on March 21, 2019

Question 1: How many books have you read about octopuses?Question 2: How many books have you read about an octopus with seven and a half tentacles?Question 3: How many books have you read about an octopus band - an oct-estra - playing Mozart?The answers to those questions will show you how unusual, unexpected and quirky Septopus: Trouble on the High Cs is.As octopuses have eight tentacles, all of them have names that end with '8', so this book features Rot8, Irrit8, Imit8, Emul8, and my favourite - Po8 (say it aloud a few times if you don't get this one immediately).For convenience sake, though, the '8' is dropped. Rot, the seven-and-a-half tentacled octopus is on a mission to save Sea World from sabotage. His clues include red and yellow sneakers, smelly socks and the symbol of an octopus. Where can he go with these?Lots of places, including the top of a coconut tree, … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: Jyotin Goel, reading, review, Septopus: Trouble on the High Cs

No. 9 on the Shade Card

posted on March 18, 2019

When I started reading No. 9 on the Shade Card, I was not sure if I would enjoy it. I liked the idea, and I was fascinated by the fact that we never seemed to learn the narrator's name. We know her so well, but we don't know her name - unless I just missed it because I got too involved in the story.Yet, as I went on, I realised that I was enjoying the book thoroughly. I kept telling myself that I would read 'just one more chapter' and if that isn't a sign of how engrossing the book is, I don't know what is.In fairness ads, models have a shade card, and their pale skin classifies them as number 1 on the shade card, and who does not want to be number 1, right?But the narrator is number 9, and her Ajji is convinced that this is a problem. From yucky besan mixtures from the freezer to green pastes, the narrator is blackmailed time and again to try … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: Kavitha Mandana, No. 9 on the Shade Card, reading, review

The Night Diary

posted on March 16, 2019

Recently, I revisited a review of a book I loved - My Name is Rose. The book made a particularly powerful impression on me because the lead character cannot speak, not because she is mute, but because of the weight of the world on her shoulders.Nisha from The Night Diary is a character just like that. Already overcome by crippling shyness and enormous social inhibitions, life does not do Nisha any favours. There are only two people in the world Nisha feels comfortable talking to - her twin Amil, and their domestic help who is practically family, Kazi.To top it all, it is the year 1947 and everything is beginning to change. Nisha, all of 12, is puzzled by how swiftly things seem to fall apart. India, still under British rule, is growing more and more polarised, and she finds that the way she looks at people is beginning to alter. As the weeks go by and she hears whispers of … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: reading, review, The Night Diary, Veera Hiranandani

The Diamond of Drury Lane

posted on March 12, 2019

I love Julia Golding. There were a couple that I didn't end up writing about - The Glass Swallow and Ringmaster (Darcie Lock Book 1), but there were others that I devoured and simply had to gush about. Here are four that come to mind:Empty Quarter (Girl on the Run Book 2)DragonflyCat's CradleThe Middle PassageAnd now, The Diamond of Drury Lane, which begins with the wonderful lines:Reader, you are set to embark on an adventure about one hidden treasure, two bare-knuckle boxers, three enemies and four hundred and thirty-eight rioters. It is told by an ignorant and prejudiced author - me."Cat Royal - orphan, adventurer, actressThe Diamond of Drury Lane is the first of Cat Royal's adventures, and it's delicious.As a reader, characters are everything to me. If I fall in love with the character, I'm much more likely to fall in love … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: Julia Golding, reading, review, The Diamond of Drury Lane

Dead Man’s Cove

posted on March 6, 2019

The cover of Dead Man's Cove, the first of the Laura Marlin Mysteries, has a snippet from a review, proclaiming that the book will delight Enid Blyton fans. And so, even though I read the second book, Kidnap in the Caribbean, some time ago, I began this one with different expectations. The most wonderful part was that those expectations were met.As a child, I was convinced that smugglers were exciting. Anyone who has read Five Go to Smuggler's Top and The Secret of Spiggy Holes will, I think, have similar responses. Ooh! Smugglers! What fun! Smugglers, for me, were equated with adventure. Even when people spoke to me of binoculars and cameras being smuggled into India, I had the same kind of starry-eyed reaction.As a child who lived vicariously through books, Enid Blyton's stories came with a sense of security. … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: Dead Mans Cove, Enid Blyton, Kidnap in the Caribbean, Lauren St John, reading, review

Me and Mister P

posted on February 22, 2019

Text: Me and Mister P Written by Maria Farrer, Illustrated by Daniel Rieley Image: A polar bear at a doorway, a boy on the inside of the house facing the bear

There are times when only a polar bear will do ..."Arthur and Liam's MumI'm still smiling as I write this review, even though I finished reading Me and Mister P yesterday. It's such a charming read, one that reminded me of Nurse Matilda and Mary Poppins. Except that there's no nanny here - because there are times when only a polar bear will do, right?Arthur is fed up with the fact that his brother Liam, who is specially abled, gets all the attention from his family. Everything is now about Liam.Liam cannot take the school bus because he does not like crowds. Arthur cannot watch the football match on TV because Liam is upset.Liam is embarrassing. He sings loudly, hums all the time, dances--and Arthur can't take it anymore. He hates it when other people make fun of Liam because he feels that they're making fun of him.So, he decides to run away.Except that … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: Me and Mister P, reading, review

The Little Rainmaker

posted on February 12, 2019

It is the year 2028, and it hasn't rained for ten years. The last time it rained, Anoushqa was in her mother's womb. She kicked when it rained. That's her only experience of rain, an experience that she does not even remember. Sometimes, she wonders if rain is even real, or just part of one of her Grampa's stories.The Little Rainmaker is a heartwarming read. I was moved to tears on multiple occasions because it was impossible not to feel and live Anoushqa's passion.At ten, we're superheroes, aren't we? Self-doubt has not really begun to creep in yet. Even when it makes an appearance, we are confident that we can change the world. That's the joy of being ten!But when Anoushqa's Grampa dreams of seeing rain one last time, the ten-year-old does not know what to do. Enterprising as she is, can she really battle all the naysayers and make rain? Can she do the … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: reading, review, Roopal Kewalya, The Little Rainmaker

The Lies We Tell

posted on February 9, 2019

I finished reading The Lies We Tell last night. I woke up this morning, still disturbed. For a moment, I just had a vague sense of unease that I could not place, but a few seconds later, I knew I was still in another place, in another character. I was still Irfan Ahmed.I read Talking of Muskaan two years ago, and it made such a powerful impression on me that I knew I had to read The Lies We Tell. Yet, halfway through the latter, I was frowning. I did not feel that the promise of the title was kept. Sure, all the tumultuous adolescent emotions felt authentic, but I did not want the book to be just another Young Adult novel that floats by, barely impacting me.I was disenchanted enough to look for reviews of the book, something I rarely do. Goodreads had one review; Amazon had one review, perhaps by the same person. Four stars.At that … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: Himanjali Sankar, reading, review, The Lies We Tell

Bungee Cord Hair

posted on February 8, 2019

Five months ago, an editor mentioned to me that publishers in India believe that Asian literature, apart from books written in the subcontinent, will not sell. I was taken aback by the idea, but I didn't know what to say. I had not thought about it at all, so I did not have an opinion.Naturally, the conversation got me thinking. What was the last book I read that was Asian, but not from the subcontinent?I thought of Chinese Cinderella and The Joy Luck Club. Both long ago.It was time to change that. I began with Pachinko and liked it a lot. I wanted to read more, particularly children's literature. The best place to begin, I thought, was the Scholastic Asian Book Award, so I began my research.I found only three books that were affordable, and wondered, would that be one of the reasons I haven't read much Asian literature that does not hail from the subcontinent?I began … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: Bungee Cord Hair, Ching Yeung Russell, reading, review, Scholastic Asian Book Award 2012

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