![]() ![]() There have been recipes that were a part of the royal kitchen and could still be found. The food culture in India is very rich and exquisite. Talking in the Indian context, food is the center point of the country’s past and present. Also, food helps in forming very powerful memories that stay with us throughout our lives.įood, being necessary to survive, has a history of its own. Different places all over the world have a particular dish to offer that just blows anyone’s mind away. Food is the path to know the culture, tradition, and practices of a civilization or a place. ![]() Hop on! Or as Alice did, plunge into the rabbit hole.“One cannot think well, love well, sleep well if one has not dined well.” The quote by 19th century English writer, Virginia Woolf, depicts the place food holds in our lives. The author has written 12 books for children and can be reached at GobbledyBook is a fortnightly column that gives a peek into the wondrous world of children’s books. Most of them are informed and open and will suggest books just right for what you or your children need. If you find it hard to get your hands on these books, ask at a children’s library or an independent children’s bookstore like Funky Rainbow and Lightroom in Bengaluru, for recommendations. Older children, who are more curious and want to dig deeper, might want to read books like Best At It by Maulik Pancholy, Talking of Muskaan by Himanjali Sankar and It Has No Name by Payal Dhar. It has light, slice-of-life stories of two sisters who just happen to have two mothers.īooks like My Friends and Me by Stephanie Stansbie/Katy Halford and A Family is a Family is a Family by Sara O’Leary/Qin Leng show a child that there can be many different kinds of families. A great example is Reva and Prisha by Shals Mahajan, illustrations by Lavanya Karthik. The best way to normalise LGBTQ+ identities is to include the characters in familiar stories, in familiar, commonplace settings without making them a big issue. Anybody who has faced certain expectations from others, when they feel differently, will relate to this story! Red: A Crayon’s Story is a funny, sweet story of a blue crayon labelled red by mistake. In Friends Under the Summer Sun by Ashutosh Pathak/Kanak Shashi, free to read on StoryWeaver, the little girl asks her neighbour, “Are you a girl or a boy?” and the neighbour answers, “Does it matter?” In Guthli has Wings by Kanak Shashi, Guthli asks: “Why do you keep saying I’m a boy when I’m a girl?” Ritu Weds Chandni by Ameya Narvankar talks about a wedding, the family’s disapproval, and a child’s questions about it all. Heather has Two Mommies by Leslea Newman/Laura Cornell is more than 30 years old, and is a simple, sweet introduction to a family with two mothers. Here are some books that could introduce children to these conversations, and help adults feel more comfortable talking to children (and each other!) about them. Being informed about these conversations prepares a child for whatever is to come: to understand themselves, to be a good friend to someone who needs one, and to be informed and aware in a world where conversations about LGBTQ+ identities are becoming commonplace. Avoiding this subject will not make it go away. If you don’t make a big deal out of it, they won’t either. Children are very accepting of ideas of any kind. Parents hesitate to buy them for their children, saying that kids will not understand, or that it will “put ideas into children’s heads.” Many schools are wary about including them in their libraries, and the reason they give is that parents will object. However, not many people know about these books. The conversations about LGBTQ+(Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer or Questioning) issues and identities have grown over the last decade, and they have naturally found their way into children’s books. ![]()
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