The Rupa Book of Ruskin Bond's Himalayan Tales is Ruskin Bond's own collection of short stories, essays and poems, 17 in all theme of course being the hills. Delightful reading, especially with the Haikus and poems that are interspersed with the stories. An entertaining blend of fiction and non-fiction.
To Begin with the Poems are On Wings of Sleep followed by the Story of 'The Wind on Haunted Hills' and The Essay on 'Mother Hill'
'Who goes to the Hills, goes to his Mother', wrote Kipling, and he seldom wrote
truer words. For living in the hills was like living in the bosom of a strong, sometimes
proud, but always a comforting mother. And every time I went away, the homecoming
would be tender and precious. It became increasingly difficult for me to go away.
Then again a Poem on
- The Whistling Schoolboy
Followed by the story of
- 'The Song of the Whistling Thrush' and the Essay
- 'The Night the Roof Blew Off'.
- Then the story on the Cherry Tree;
- From the Pool to the Glacier - is a little long one, in 5 parts;
- The Last Truck Ride - of the stray mule suddenly comming on the road when Pritam Sing is driving fast, on how the tree saved him
- A walk through Garhwal - '"In a thousand ages of the gods I could not tell thee of the glories of Himachal". So confessed a Sanskrit poet at the dawn of Indian history and he came closer than anyone else to capturing the spell of the Himalayas.
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