Moonrise from the Green Grass Roof
Material type: TextPublication details: . Harper Collins 2017Description: 216pISBN: 978-9352773831Subject(s): Children's stories | English Literature | Hindi Literature - Translation | Novel, Translated | Stories | UniverseDDC classification: 813 Summary: There were a hundred games the children played with the sky. Each question that arose in a child's mind was a game. 'Where is the moon?' they asked if they woke up in the middle of the night. There's a pygmy mountain at the edge of the village. Near the top of the mountain is a mysterious hole. If you toss a stone down that hole, it will keep falling until you return to hear it hit the bottom. There's a second-grader named Bolu in the village school. He only speaks while he walks. If you want to speak to him, you must walk with him. And then there's the moon, rising from the green grass roof. It travels with Bolu and his friends wherever they go. In this book, light as pebbles skimming across a pond, Vinod Kumar Shukla speaks of the wonder of a universe in which, however separate we seem, we are inevitably joined as one.Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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Children's Books | Ektara Trust | 813/SHU (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 2067 | ||
Children's Books | Ektara Trust | 813/SHU (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 351 | ||
Children's Books | Ektara Trust | 813/SHU (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 352 |
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813/SHR The Boy in The Dark Hole | 813/SHR The Boy in The Dark Hole | 813/SHU Moonrise from the Green Grass Roof | 813/SHU Moonrise from the Green Grass Roof | 813/SHU Moonrise from the Green Grass Roof | 813/SHY Tataki Wins Again and Braveheart Badeyya | 813/SHY Tataki Wins Again and Braveheart Badeyya |
There were a hundred games the children played with the sky. Each question that arose in a child's mind was a game. 'Where is the moon?' they asked if they woke up in the middle of the night. There's a pygmy mountain at the edge of the village. Near the top of the mountain is a mysterious hole. If you toss a stone down that hole, it will keep falling until you return to hear it hit the bottom. There's a second-grader named Bolu in the village school. He only speaks while he walks. If you want to speak to him, you must walk with him. And then there's the moon, rising from the green grass roof. It travels with Bolu and his friends wherever they go. In this book, light as pebbles skimming across a pond, Vinod Kumar Shukla speaks of the wonder of a universe in which, however separate we seem, we are inevitably joined as one.
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