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Tag Archives: Children

Children


Ahmad Raza Ahmadi. Illustrations by Nahid Kazmi
FIR MILENGE
2018

All published by Jugnu Prakashan, an imprint of Takshashila Education Society, Bhopal

Children are often seen as insulated from the world’s worries and continue to live in a world of make-believe and fantasy. This world is far removed from life’s realities that can be harsh and damaging for the child. Print and electronic media developed.


Reviewed by: Toolika Wadhwa

Pramod Padwal and Umesh Kumar
KISSON KI DUNIYA: A REPRESENTATIVE COLLECTION OF MARATHI STORIES FOR CHILDREN
2019

I must admit that as a reader of adult Marathi books and as a translator I was really looking forward to reading children’s stories from Marathi literature. I was also wondering how the distinctive flavour of Marathi humour, turn of phrase, and cultural references would be communicated to a young Hindi reader.


Reviewed by: Sandhya Gandhi-Vakil

Nandita Basu
THE PIANO: STORY OF A FRIENDSHIP
2020

The Piano is an unusual book. A graphic novel that draws you in immediately, it tells the story of a young girl Meera who is alone and wants nothing more than a friend in her life. It begins with her writing a letter to God, asking for a friend. And then.


Reviewed by: Andaleeb Wajid

y Sanjeev Jaiswal ‘Sanjay’. Illustrations by Ankur Mitra
Shiv Narayan Gour
2019

Sanjeev Jaiswal’s Red Sun Ke Alien is a science-fiction (sci-fi) mystery drama novella. Sci-fi is one of the popular genres of  literature whose content is imaginative, but based on science. It relies heavily on scientific facts, theories, and principles as support.


Reviewed by: Sanjeev Jaiswal ‘Sanjay’. Illustrations by Ankur Mitra

Harshikaa Udasi
FRIENDS BEHIND WALLS
2020

This book was like revisiting my childhood and the boys’ all at once. The story is set in Deolali (Maharashtra) and echoes the memories of our childhood. The excitement of being in a new place, the thrill and apprehension of meeting new people and having to make new


Reviewed by: Tanu Shree Singh

Swapna Dutta
SHADOWS IN THE SNOW
2019

Shadows in the Snow is an intriguing book filled with a certain air of mystery, even though there is no suspense on the surface as such. The atmosphere of Darjeeling created by the author captures the essence of those hills perfectly. The descriptions of waterfalls.


Reviewed by: Ilika Trivedi

Kay S.
DANGEROUS FROTH
2019

‘For most, school begins with crayons, satchels and tears. But for Ananya, it began with smiles and a lipstick.’

This delightful children’s novel recounting a young girl’s adventures in a private boarding school opens by describing the delight of its protagonist Ananya Patel.


Reviewed by: Rohini Rangachari

Tanu Shree Singh. Illustrations by Sandhya Prabhat
DARKLESS
2019

Here is a complete package of real life conflict, love and hope attractively coloured by gloom of darkness to sparkle of Light. The unusual title—Darkless–invokes curiosity because there is no such word in the dictionary, still it manages to convey a whole depth of meaning as the story completes.


Reviewed by: Ira Saxena

Manoj Das. Illustrations by Sisir Datta
LEGEND OF THE GOLDEN VALLEY
2020

‘Long, long ago there was a kingdom called the Golden Valley, nestling amidst evergreen forests.’ Manoj Das’s book opens in the manner the best fairy tales do–by evoking an idyllic sylvan world where ‘everyone lives happily’.  However, he says, even in Golden Valley,..


Reviewed by: Padma Baliga

Devika Rangachari
QUEEN OF EARTH
2020

‘History tells us what people do. Historical fiction helps us imagine how they felt.’ Jean M Auel

Queen of Earth is a gender bending narrative of a spunky queen, appropriate to our times.

Kalinga of the seventh century is a vast land ruled by two adversaries, the Somavamsha and the Bhaumakaras.

The fate of a young princess caught in their crossfire is expertly depicted by Devika Rangachari in Queen of Earth.


Reviewed by: Sumitra Kannan


A doption is not an alien concept to Indians…


Reviewed by:

Varsha Seshan
SISTERS AT NEW DAWN
2020

Sisters at New Dawn by Varsha Seshan is a coming-of-age story of two sisters, Padma and Kannagi Shankar. Most of the action of the story takes place at New Dawn, a high school that is committed to fostering values of ‘honesty, integrity, justice’ in the students enrolled there.


Reviewed by: Sakshi Dogra

Aparna Karthikeyan. Illustrations by Sagar Kolwankar
WOOF! ADVENTURES BY THE SEA
2020

A cardboard box appears on the beach, a wet wriggling cardboard box. What does it contain?

Woof! Adventures by the Sea narrates the life of Mumbai’s homeless dogs on the beach. A new puppy is discovered and helped by the pack of resident dogs and large-hearted humans, given a name and a sense of belonging.


Reviewed by: Shailaja Srinivasan

Sophia Khan. Illustrations by Arapaie Black
THE FLIGHT OF THE ARCONAUT
2020

Some of South Asian literature’s most lauded works belong to the fascinating category of Sci-fi/Dystopian Fiction. It already existed even before its so-called definitions came to the forefront. Resurgence and increasing acclaim of western sci-fi fiction.


Reviewed by: Shuby Abidi

Satyajit Ray. Translated from the original Bengali by Satyajit Ray and Indrani Majumdar
THE FINAL ADVENTURES OF PROFESSOR SHONKU
2020

Bengali Renaissance had contributed significantly to the literary works and the cultural resurgence in India between the nineteenth and twentieth century. Even before the movements like ‘Prakalpana’ and the Little Magazine Movement gained momentum in twentieth-century Bengal.


Reviewed by: Sabah Hussain

Shefali Jha and Rekharaj. Illustrations by Chinan and K.P. Rezi. Translated from the original English into Hindi by Swayam Prakash
ITIHAAS KI ATMAYEIN (SPIRITS FROM HISTORY)
2020

Itihaas ki Atmayein is a collection of two stories from English into Hindi, namely, Badshah, Mera Dost (My Friend, The Emperor) by Shefali Jha and Pyaari Atmayein (Beloved Spirits), by Rekharaj. The former narrates the story of a young boy Adil who is disinterested in the subject history.


Reviewed by: Sakshi Dogra

Nayanika Mahtani
ACROSS THE LINE
2020

What is a solitary, hastily drawn line capable of? Could this line impact millions of lives, and, ultimately, generations to come?

Nayanika Mahtani’s Across The Line dwells on such a topic, and is inarguably my best fortuitous read in a long time. A tour-de-force in its own right.


Reviewed by: Shreyas Vadrewu

Anita Roy
GRAVEPYRES SCHOOL FOR THE RECENTLY DECEASED
2020

Joseph Srinivas wakes up one day to find that things aren’t quite right. He hasn’t jumped through a closet door, nor got a special letter—he just happens to find himself in a strange new place. He is greeted by Mishi, a fellow transitioner who guides him through Gravepyres.


Reviewed by: Vishesh Unni Raghunathan

Perumal Murugan. Illustrations by Priya Kuriyan
POONACHI: LOST IN THE FOREST
2020

Perumal Murugan is one of the foremost of Tamil writers today. Poonachi: Lost in the Forest is apparently extracted from a novel,  Poonachi: Or the Story of a Black Goat, which I haven’t read, was short-listed for the JCB Prize for Literature.  I have no doubt that it.


Reviewed by: Bharati Jagannathan

Nabaneeta Dev Sen. Translated from Bangla by Deepankar Biswas Illustrations by Proiti Roy
RANJAN’S TALE
2019

As The Book Review went into press for its children’s issue in November last year, Nabaneeta Dev Sen lay dying, and breathed her last on November 7, 2019 after a prolonged battle with cancer. It was too late to include an obituary, but a children’s writer as.


Reviewed by: Nivedita Sen
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ISSN No. 0970-4175 (Print)