<p class="ListingGrey"><span class="bold">Bipathu And A Very Big Dream</span></p>.<p>Anita Nair</p>.<p>Puffin, pp 216, Rs 299</p>.<p>When school reopens in the village of Kaikurussi after the pandemic lockdown, nine-year-old Bipathu makes new friends. And one of them wants to play football...</p>.<p class="ListingGrey"><span class="bold">Red Sky Over Kabul</span></p>.<p>Baryalai Popalzai and Kevin McLean</p>.<p>Speaking Tiger, pp 288, Rs 499</p>.<p>This is a vivid portrait of a vanished Afghanistan — a world of kite flying, duck hunting and sitar lessons; a world lost to unending, horrific violence.</p>.<p class="ListingGrey"><span class="bold">The Starved</span></p>.<p>Mangalu Charan Biswal</p>.<p>Hachette, pp 160, Rs 399</p>.<p>A tale of crippling deprivation and staggering optimism, this revolutionary work of Sambalpuri literature inspects the longevity of hope in the face of adversity.</p>.<p class="ListingGrey"><span class="bold">I Named My Sister Silence</span></p>.<p>Manoj Rupda</p>.<p>Eka, pp 180, Rs 499</p>.<p>A little boy follows an elephant into a forest, fascinated and as if in a trance. His foray ends in tragedy, for the elephant is eaten alive by wild dogs even as the boy is sitting atop it...</p>.<p class="ListingGrey"><span class="bold">The Yogi Witch</span></p>.<p>Zorian Cross</p>.<p>HarperCollins, pp 352, Rs 399</p>.<p>Myths become real and the mundane becomes enchanting as Jai and his witchy family remove the veil that separates reality from fantasy while enjoying endless cups of lavender tea.</p>
<p class="ListingGrey"><span class="bold">Bipathu And A Very Big Dream</span></p>.<p>Anita Nair</p>.<p>Puffin, pp 216, Rs 299</p>.<p>When school reopens in the village of Kaikurussi after the pandemic lockdown, nine-year-old Bipathu makes new friends. And one of them wants to play football...</p>.<p class="ListingGrey"><span class="bold">Red Sky Over Kabul</span></p>.<p>Baryalai Popalzai and Kevin McLean</p>.<p>Speaking Tiger, pp 288, Rs 499</p>.<p>This is a vivid portrait of a vanished Afghanistan — a world of kite flying, duck hunting and sitar lessons; a world lost to unending, horrific violence.</p>.<p class="ListingGrey"><span class="bold">The Starved</span></p>.<p>Mangalu Charan Biswal</p>.<p>Hachette, pp 160, Rs 399</p>.<p>A tale of crippling deprivation and staggering optimism, this revolutionary work of Sambalpuri literature inspects the longevity of hope in the face of adversity.</p>.<p class="ListingGrey"><span class="bold">I Named My Sister Silence</span></p>.<p>Manoj Rupda</p>.<p>Eka, pp 180, Rs 499</p>.<p>A little boy follows an elephant into a forest, fascinated and as if in a trance. His foray ends in tragedy, for the elephant is eaten alive by wild dogs even as the boy is sitting atop it...</p>.<p class="ListingGrey"><span class="bold">The Yogi Witch</span></p>.<p>Zorian Cross</p>.<p>HarperCollins, pp 352, Rs 399</p>.<p>Myths become real and the mundane becomes enchanting as Jai and his witchy family remove the veil that separates reality from fantasy while enjoying endless cups of lavender tea.</p>