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A Sailor Called Wet Paint and Other Secret Stories from History

Nandini Nayar (Author)
399
  • Publisher : Hachette India
  • Publishing year : August 2023
  • Binding : Paperback
  • ISBN : 9789357312530
  • Imprint : Hachette India
  • Age Group : Young Reader
  • Language : English
Genre : History

What can a lady in a thin sari do to survive in COLD England? How will a ship's crew RETURN home without any money? Wh ...

 

What can a lady in a thin sari do to survive in COLD England?

How will a ship's crew RETURN home without any money?

When did the young ayah last see her OWN family?

And why, oh why, did the sailor write WET PAINT in a young girl's diary?

Nannies and sailors taken 4,000 miles away to England to work...it's the same SORRY tale.

Often ABANDONED, they have to find their own way across the sea, back home to India!

It's upsetting. It's shocking. It's breaking our hearts.

What are we to DO?

Well, here are stories – a whole SHEAF of them about – AYAHS in a foreign land and the Indian crew of LASCARS on ships, questioning why the British don't treat these people kindly. Asking to give them the home, the care and the freedom they deserve.

But is ANYONE listening?

Are YOU?

Author : Nandini Nayar

 

Nandini Nayar is the author of over 40 books for children.

 Her first book was Pranav’s Picture, published by Tulika in 2005. Since then, she has written 22 picture books for various publishers in India. Nandini likes to focus on the everyday events in a child’s life, creating stories that reflect the recognisable contours of a familiar world.

She has published over a dozen books for middle grade readers.

Apoorva’s Fat Diary, the first book in a four-part series about a plump girl, has been appreciated by children and adults for tackling issues like body-shaming, bullying and sexual abuse. Nandini does not flinch from presenting parents and adults in a less-than-flattering light, thereby creating characters who are flawed and therefore realistic.

Humour is a recurring motif in her books, as are the tensions within Indian families. Food is another motif in her books and she uses it in a variety of ways – as the means by which a mother and child bond in What Shall I Make?, as a vehicle for identifying family loyalties in The Curious Case of the Sweet and Spicy Sweetshop and as something that is instrumental in helping children establish their identities as in The Chicken that Started It All and The Great River Magic.

Nandini has also contributed entries on 21 Indian children’s authors and illustrators to the Oxford Encyclopaedia of Children’s Literature. She is a teacher by training and has worked on textbooks for both school and university levels.

 Awards and Honours:

 The House of Fourteen Cats, winner, Children’s Book Trust prize.

Mouse and Bear, winner, Children’s Book Trust prize (Forthcoming)

The Perfect Chair, winner, Children’s Book Trust prize (Forthcoming)

Rani Lakshmibai, Federation of Indian Publishers Award.

What Shall I Make? Honoured as “Outstanding Book” by the United States Board on Books for Young Readers.

Apoorva’s Fat Diary was judged the most popular book by secondary school children across India, who read it as part of the Leading Reading Schools of India 2016.

 

Author website – www.nandininayar.in

Bloghttps://nandininayar.in/blog-2/

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