English, asked by XPrinceThakurX, 1 year ago

stories of Ruskin Bond that can be converted into a poem​

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Answered by XxUnknownxX
0

Answer:

Well dear, Ever since he came out with his first book at the age of 17, Ruskin Bond has uncountable works to his name, be it short stories, novels, poems and essays and the octogenarian author now wishes to try his hand at something he hasn't done till now - a detective novel.

Bond says he read a lot of Agatha Christie and detective stories of other writers since the age of 10. "Occasionally I have written about stories related to crime but I have never attempted a traditional detective story. So I want to write a true detective story," he said in an interview. Bond has written a number of novellas, essays, poems and children's books. He has also written over 500 short stories and articles that have appeared in magazines and anthologies.

On his 84th birthday on May 19, he came out with his latest book Ranji and the Music Maker. Published by Penguin Random House imprint Puffin India, the book is about young Ranji who once in the middle of his languid holiday, stumbles upon assorted musical instruments in the storeroom - first a shrill flute, then a blaring little trumpet and, finally, a too-big drum that may have once sounded a battle march.

Ranji stages impromptu concerts down the road, not sparing his neighbours, the cats around his porch, or the peace-loving inhabitants of the zoo. "The book was set off, inspired you might say, by the photograph of a small boy playing his flute for a kitten sent to me by a reader in Sri Lanka. I imagined the little boy as Ranji," says Bond.

On his writing journey, Bond says, "When I ventured into writing at the age of 17, I wanted to be a good and successful writer. I just wanted to write good stuff - poems, prose, stories, essays, everything."

Reading is also very important for Bond. "My first book was a big one of nursery rhymes." As a boy he wanted to emulate his favourite authors and be one of them himself

On children's books of today, he says he is happy that more and more publishers are now coming out with books for kids. "Now you have books for different ages. There are good illustrators too," he says. On graphic novels, he says he doesn't get absorbed into them. "I liked the old comic books, especially the funny ones like Popeye and Beetle Bailey."

Answered by anya1234
1

Ruskin Bond is a standout amongst the most well-known writers and authors of India. His first novel was The Room on the Roof, which he composed at an age of seventeen and earned the John Llewellyn Rhys Memorial Prize in the year 1957. His works can likewise be found in reading material of relatively every school. With a writing career spreading over more than 50 years, he has explored different avenues regarding an assortment of types – apart from novels, he has composed a few expositions, short stories, novellas, children’s books and poems. In 1992, he got the Sahitya Akademi Award, Padma Shri in the year 1999 and Padma Bhushan in 2014.

Bond has been composing for his Indian fans since the 1950s, yet pundits have tended to give careful consideration to expatriate Indian writers as opposed to the indigenous ones. With this rundown, we mean to convey to our readers a list of 35 of the best Ruskin Bond Books out of the more than 500 books, expositions and short stories composed by him.

Room on the Roof is about an orphaned seventeen-year-old Anglo-Indian boy named Rusty who has no real family after his parents’ death. Even though he lives with his guardian Mr. John Harrison, he doesn’t feel at home and due to his guardian's strict ways, he runs away from his home to live with his Indian friends. While seeing many things about India such as customs, bazaars and diversity, he feels good about being in India. Soon, he gets a job teaching English to a boy named Kishen, in return for a tiny room on the roof. This book won the John Llewellyn Rhys Memorial Prize in 1957.

The Blue Umbrella is a 1980 Indian novel written by Ruskin Bond. In a small village of Himachal Pradesh, a little girl Binya trades her lucky leopard’s claw pendant for a pretty, frilly blue umbrella. There were many who envied Binya her treasured possession, and the most envious of them all was old Ram Bharosa, the shopkeeper, who decided that he must own the blue umbrella, by means fair or foul.

In 2005 it was adapted into a Hindi film by the same name, directed by Vishal Bhardwaj, which later won the National Film Award for Best Children's Film.

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