logo
  New Login   
image

Shobhana Bhattacharji


Shobhana Bhattacharji

THE PUFFIN BOOK OF CLASSIC STORIES FOR GIRLS
By Manjula Padmanabhan
Penguin Books, New Delhi, India, 2010, pp. 155, 150.00

VOLUME XXXV NUMBER 11 NOVEMBER 2011

The Puffin Book of Classic Stories for Girls was first published in 2010. Its title is misleading and yet not, depending on what you understand by 'stories.' These are neither original stories nor all short stories nor all of them written originally for girls or even for children in general. But they are well chosen extracts, including one from Heidi by Johanna Spyri. Little Heidi has just arrived to live with her grandfather high in the Swiss mountains. She meets Peter with whom she shares her food without really noticing that he is poor and has less to eat than her. She falls in love with the goats and runs about all day, filling the pages with her bubbling happiness. From Alice's Adventures in Wonderland we have the bit where Alice falls down the rabbit hole and wants to get through the little door leading to the garden. She eats magic food to make her smaller and larger and so on. I had forgotten how much detail there is in the description of her rushing through the tunnel. She has plenty of time to see labels on bottles, take out things from shelves, examine them and put them back, all the while falling down down down. Ruskin Bond’s The Blue Umbrella was new to me. It is one of his sweetly moving hill stories. In this extract, a little girl acquires a blue umbrella and will not be parted from it. In 'Making a Mango Whistle' from Bibhutibhushan Bandhopadhyay's Pather Panchali, Durga is accused of stealing and is beaten by her mother. Apu, unhappy and upset, goes in search of her. Tony Judt recently wrote of how until about the 1950s, the twentieth century was in many ways continuous with the nineteenth century (we still used coal in kitchens, for example). I was reminded of this by the title of this extract. In the 1950s, we also used to make mango whistles, yanking young mango seedlings out of the ground where they had grown from carelessly flung seeds, by the roadside, between tufts of grass in the school playground. We would chop off the seed from the young plant and grate it against stone to expose a sliver of the hollow inside. It made a piercing and efficient whistle. There's Darcy's crude rejection of Elizabeth Bennet as a dance partner from Pride and Prejudice ('She is not handsome ...


Table of Contents >>
Please or to Read More Entire Article
«BACK

Free Access Online 12 Back Issues
with 1 year's subscription
Archive (1976-2011)
under construction.