Scenes from a Writer's Life
English


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About The Book

In Scene’s from a Writer’s Life Ruskin Bond recollects his earliest memoirs which are rather bittersweet and relate to Jamnager where he lives till he is six. The happy hours spent in exploring the Ram Vilas Palace grounds and playing with his younger sister Ellen and the palace children are overshadowed by the acrimonious relation between his parents. Their estrangement while he is still a child leaves him with a lifelong sense of insecurity. His unhappiness is exacerbated by the untimely death of his father-his emotional anchor-when the author is just ten. Forced to stay with his mother and his stepfather both of whom are absorbed in their own worlds he tries to fend off his loneliness through books and the company of a few friends. Left for the most part to himself the gentle dreamer realizes very early-as ‘a pimply adolescent'-his calling as a writer. His first book The Room on the Roof materializes in England the land of his forefathers where he is sent to make a career for himself. Despite the unexpected success of his novel which wins a major British literary prize the author’s yearning for India is too powerful to let him remain abroad for long. He returns and begins a writing career which has spanned four decades and earned him a place in the pantheon of great Indian writers. About the Author Ruskin Bond's first novel The Room on the Roof written when he was seventeen won the John Llewellyn Rhys Memorial Prize in 1957. Since then he has written several novels (including Vagrants in the Valley A Flight of Pigeons and Delhi Is Not Far) essays poems and children's books many of which have been published by Penguin India.He has also written over 500 short stories and articles that have appeared in a number of magazines and anthologies. He received the Sahitya Akademi Award in 1993 and the Padma Shri in 1999.
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