Thursday, March 26, 2015

Rusty Goes to London


After going through the Vagrants in the Valley, it was an automatic choice that I follow Rusty to London and back. The book which sketches the making of a writer in the young Rusty is filled with the easy paced humour laced anecdotes that not only refreshes the spirits but lifts it too. As the young Rusty tries to earn a living as a writer he is faced with a myriad of adventures including meeting the ghost of Kipling and Sherlock Holmes in person! He is first given shelter by his relatives but curiously he feels more at home with persons coming from India and other parts of Asia. But this does not keep him facing strange incidents, once in a Chinese restaurant and another time at his residence celebrating a Calypso Christmas with a strange bunch of friends and friends of friends. But it was only obvious that he return to the hills of Dehra and tries his fortune at the place where he actually belong. So Rusty severed his ties with the land he thinks is foreign and traces his path back. Once in Dehra he is again drawn to the magical beauty not only of the town but also of the people. The town also never fails to delight him with its assortments of 'nuts', a circus from which a tiger escapes, visions of his loving father, a princess and her incredible mother. The narratives here contain some mature contents but believe me the way it has been presented not only shows the ingenuity of the author but also will bring nothing short of a smile to your lips. The sheer enjoyment of reading the chapters will enthral the readers and once it is finished they will long for more. It is very noble of Puffin that the series has been chronologically ordered for the very first time but I feel that a reader does not need to start from the first to enjoy the appeal. Another notable aspect of the book is illustrations by Kallol Majumder which makes reading more and more appealing.