Calling Sehmat
by Harinder S. Sikka (Penguin Random House)
The story is set in 1971, a year marked by heightened tension between India and Pakistan. A young college-going Kashmiri girl, Sehmat, is asked by her father (his dying wish) to follow his path as a spy for India. Sehmat is trained by the Indian intelligence agencies and married off to the son of a well-connected Pakistani Army general with the brief to pass on military information to Indian intelligence. The book unravels several plots and twists resulting in a page-turner.
The Upside-Down King: Unusual Tales about Rama and Krishna
by Sudha Murty (Puffin Books)
The book is divided into two sections — Raghunandhanam Rama and KrishnamVande Jagatguru. The narrative begins with the story of King Dilip, the great-grandfather of Rama, who had vowed to protect Nandhini the cow and offered himself to a lion who had come to attack Nandhini. Pleased with his devotion, the gods, who were testing him, blessed him with a child.
The tales are about the days when gods and demons walked alongside humans, animals could talk and gods granted glorious boons to common people.
As in her other books, Murthy’s language is simple and easy to understand.
DANCE OF THE WILD
by Richa Jha, Illustrated by Ruchi Mhasane, (Pickle Yolk Books)
Jha, who describes herself as “an author, picture book enthusiast, publisher, free thinker and dreamer”, addresses complex subjects such as gender stereotypes with delicate humour making these issues comprehensible to young minds.