Download Life With Grandfather  Free Books Full Version
Life With Grandfather Hardcover | Pages: 48 pages
Rating: 4.36 | 39 Users | 2 Reviews

Identify Books As Life With Grandfather


Rendition Supposing Books Life With Grandfather

'Life with Grandfather' was written by Shankar Pillai, well known cartoonist and founder of the Children's Book Trust. His illustrations are as evocative and heartwarming as the stories of a child growing up in a rural setting in (what seems to be) the early part of the 20th century. Raja, the hero, is an orphan, but he has a loving family in his grandparents, uncle, pet squirrel, the crocodile in the pond and the temple elephant, among others. His adventures make exciting reading, while the values he learns from his grandfather (a stern disciplinarian outwardly, but an open-minded humanist at heart) are very relevant even today. A must-read for every Indian child and all those interested in India. I don't really know if the appeal of the book is culture-specific -- it would be interesting to hear of the impressions of non-Indians.

Specify Epithetical Books Life With Grandfather

Title:Life With Grandfather
Author:Shankar Pillai
Book Format:Hardcover
Book Edition:First Edition
Pages:Pages: 48 pages
Published:1967 by The Children's Book Trust (first published 1965)
Categories:Cultural. India. Humor

Rating Epithetical Books Life With Grandfather
Ratings: 4.36 From 39 Users | 2 Reviews

Critique Epithetical Books Life With Grandfather


All right, I'm guilty of bias. This was the first book I can recall having read, and I spent seven years looking for a copy. But having re-read it in my twenties, I can still see the charm. Raja is an orphan living with his rich grandparents and his uncle in an Indian village, and his narratives provide an amazing insight into typical village life in India. Casteism, untouchability, taboo, superstitions, love for nature - all the aspects that make life in rural India what it is, are wonderfullyAll right, I'm guilty of bias. This was the first book I can recall having read, and I spent seven years looking for a copy. But having re-read it in my twenties, I can still see the charm. Raja is an orphan living with his rich grandparents and his uncle in an Indian village, and his narratives provide an amazing insight into typical village life in India. Casteism, untouchability, taboo, superstitions, love for nature - all the aspects that make life in rural India what it is, are wonderfully