Ebooks ruskin bond




















His literary career spans over six decades and has been adored for his children literature as well as his love for nature, mountains and especially India! The Blue Umbrella is one of the most famous books by Ruskin Bond. Set in a village in Himachal Pradesh, the story revolves around a blue umbrella, which is given to a young village girl, Binya, by some tourists in exchange of her lucky charm leopard claw pendant.

Her umbrella becomes very popular in the village, to the length that a shopkeeper becomes obsessed with obtaining it and offers to buy it from the girl, only to be rejected. Let no man take your dream away. It will sustain you to the end. As the earliest one amongst the famous books by Ruskin Bond, the story revolves around an orphaned Anglo-Indian boy named Rusty, who lives with his guardians in Dehradun.

His guardian keeps him from mingling with Indians and one day after getting punished for going into the bazaar, Rusty runs away and with the help of some friends he made at the bazaar starts a new life. Later, he gets a job teaching English to a boy named Kishen, in exchange for food and a small room on the roof. All the stories mentioned in this work are different in essence but each is as much appealing as another.

A railway passenger who is curious about this place gets a chance to explore it when his train stops at the station for a longer duration due to some problems with the railway lines. The story tells about the day he spends in a hotel in Shamli, getting along with the people, both known and unknown he meets during his stay and the long-lasting impression town leaves on him.

They whispered among themselves and beckoned me nearer. Rusty, the Boy from the Hills explore around the life and adventures of Rusty, a curious and imaginative boy and a fictional version of Bond himself from his early childhood to his teen years. In this very famous book by Ruskin Bond, he attempts to recount and describe his childhood in the foothills of the Himalayas, which he spent with his grandparents.

One of his most popular books among children and adults alike, the stories mentioned in the book range from a pet python to escaping from enemy bombardment during World War II to encountering ghosts. The book is a mixture of weird, funny and wholesome experiences that will surely make you reminisce about your own childhood memories! The story revolves around Ruth Labadoor and her family; her father is killed in front of her by rebels who had decided to wipe out all British people in the town.

Ruth and her mother escape and take shelter in a house of their servant, from where they are discovered and taken by a notorious Pathan to his own house. Contrary to their expectations, they are treated well in the house and after a series of events are able to safely reunite with their relatives as the British took control and curbed the revolt. As mentioned in the foreword by the author, Delhi Is Not Far is a plotless story, revolving around the life of numerous lower-middle-class people in the small town of Pipalnagar.

The different characters in the story include a writer, a barber, an orphan, a teenager etc. But due to different reasons mainly financial, none of them manage to make it to Delhi at the end. This book puts forward the struggles faced by middle-class people and also their interdependent relationships with the people around them. Our Trees Still Grow in Dehra is a collection of numerous short stories that describe the life of the author from childhood to adulthood.

Counted among the most famous books by Ruskin Bond, the short stories take us on a ride where we travel with the young Ruskin Bond to the hills of Mussoorie. Along the way, we are introduced to his friends, family and other people who made an impression in his life. This collection of short stories enables us to view India from the eyes of this wonderful author. Want to pursue creative writing courses?

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One app for all your study abroad needs Download x. Ruskin Bond once famously remarked that while he does not believe in ghosts, he sees them all the time—in the woods, in a bar, in a crowd outside a cinema. Not surprising, then, that in A Face in the Dark and Other Hauntings , a collection of paranormal tales, he makes the supernatural appear entirely natural, and therefore harder to ignore.

This book opens with the unforgettable, A Face in the Dark , set in a pine forest outside Simla, and ends with Night of the Millennium , where the scene of the action is an abandoned cemetery. If you love reading ghost stories , this anthology by Ruskin Bond is definitely a treat. Funny Side Up offers a fascinating read not only for children but readers of all ages. With a unique ability to look at the most regular circumstances with exceptional wit and acuity, Ruskin Bond takes his readers to his home, his countryside, his life.

Filled with amusing and colourful characters — monkeys, wild boars, an aunt with a phobia of flowers, an eccentric cousin who thinks he is the great cricket player Ranji, the wise seven-year-old Gautam, this collection is an absorbing read.

Maharani is the story of Neena, the spoilt, selfish, beautiful and ageing widow of the Maharaja of Mastipur. She has inherited a considerable amount of wealth from her deceased husband, and the narrative focuses on her lavish life in the 60s and 70s. She is also a classmate of Ruskin Bond, who disapproves of her antics — taking lovers and discarding them, drinking too much. Over the years, Susanna becomes notorious as the merry widow who moves from one marriage to another leaving behind a trail of dead husbands.

This book includes the original short story, the novella that it was expanded into, and the screenplay of 7 Khoon Maaf that was based on the novella. Their only possessions were 3 goats, some hens and a small vegetable garden which provided with food enough to carry on, and there was their only tree, a Peepal tree.

Once, due to unforeseen circumstances, Sita is left alone on the Island. This is when the river gets angry and slowly the island begins to drown itself in the river.

Undaunted, he forges new homes and new friendships as he embarks on a journey of self-discovery that spans the beautiful hillsides of the Himalayas. He meets new people, revisits his past, finds out more about his real parents, and continues to wander looking for answers. In this brilliantly readable autobiography, Lone Fox Dancing , Ruskin Bond shows us the roots of everything he has written. He begins with a dream and a gentle haunting, before taking us to an idyllic childhood in Jamnagar by the Arabian Sea, where he composed his first poem, and New Delhi in the early s, where he found material for his first short story.

As the title suggests, Looking for the Rainbow focusses on the two years that Ruskin spent with his father in Delhi during the early s. His time in the capital is filled with books, visits to the cinema, music, and walks and conversations with his father — a dream life for a curious and wildly imaginative boy. Filled with warmth and passion, each story showcases the myriad variations of romance and heartbreak.

Set in the Mussoorie of a bygone era, Death Under the Deodars is a collection of stories which recount the mysterious cases of a murdered priest, an adulterous couple, a man who is born evil, the body in the box bed, a mysterious black dog, and the Daryaganj strangler.

This book traces the journey of a writer from Delhi, who lands up in Fosterganj by chance. The writer hopes to live like a recluse in this sleepy town, and maybe finish a book or two but fate wills otherwise. He is soon caught up in a series of astonishing and hilarious adventures — encounters with a leopard and a sinister black bird; a drunken evening in the company of several hens and a penurious prince; and a long night locked inside a haunted palace.

Dust On The Mountain tells the story of a young boy, Bisnu, who lives in the hills, right in the lap of nature working hard on his farmland. On this journey, he meets many interesting characters that flit in and out of the pages but Nature remains the most important character throughout the story.

A book about books and reading, Bond begins with the first book he discovered among the bookshelf, P. The Sensualist is the story of a man enslaved by his libido and spiralling towards self-destruction. Gripping, erotic, even brutal, the book explores the demons that its protagonist must grapple with before he is able to come to term with himself. The India I Love is a collection of nineteen heartfelt poems and essays. Ruskin Bond has filled the chapters with some nuggets of wisdom that he has processed over the years by observing people and his surroundings keenly.

Tigers for Dinner is the collection of stories narrated by Mehmoud, the khansama, or cook, for the great shikari Jim Corbett to a young Ruskin Bond. As deft with his stories as he is with koftas, lamb chops, pies and milkshakes, Mehmoud has a tall tale for every occasion — from wrestling with a cobra in his bed, being carried away into the river by a muggermuch, to when a tiger came looking for the cook. It is the story of three friends — Laurie, an English boy who moved to a hill town with his parents, Anil, the son of a local cloth merchant, and Kamal, who lost his parents during the Partition of India and now sells buttons and shoelaces.

One day the three discover a secret pool on the mountainside, and it is there that they plan their greatest escapade yet — a trek to the Pindari Glacier, where no one from their town has gone before. It is the story of two brothers, Paul and Henry who wait for an opportunity to kill their aunt so that they can inherit the property left by their uncle.

Can they plan the murder without violence, without clues and without a trace? Can they plan the perfect murder? Mehmood sits under the banyan tree and thinks about his former profession as a master kitemaker; about his good old days and laments the loss of those days of leisure and gay as men today are caught up in the maze of time and have no time and interest for such pastimes like kite flying. All Roads Lead to Ganga is a travel memoir in which Ruskin Bond captures the astonishing beauty of the magical landscape of the Himalayas, describing with nostalgia and affection the places and people he has lived with for over forty years.

He writes about the quaint charm of Dehradoon, about Manjari village in Garhwal where a tributary of Ganga flows; he writes about Mussoorie, Rudraprayag, Agastamuni, Guptakashi, etc. All the sections have between five to twelve stories in them.

The book is an ideal read for children and adults equally as it helps connects Indians to their roots. Just a little over pages, A Song of Many Rivers is a collection of 12 essays, anecdotes and short stories whose central theme is rivers. Along with their waters, these rivers are also a source of folklore, legends and stories which are more than centuries old.

From Bhagirathi and Alaknanda to Mandakini and Suswa, Ruskin Bond quite beautifully captures the essence of these rivers and the people who thrive on its waters. I have read most of them, but your post made me realize that I do have a few pending to be read. Am rushing to the bookstore after this post! A probably lost era in which digital bliss was possibly unimaginable……. Thanks a lot for your wonderful comment.

I remember reading a book in which Ruskin Bond keeps asking his father about his mother and everytime he says smthing about the Arabian sea.



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