![]() Rohini Rangachari By Mariam Karim Year 2016, pp. 135, Rs. 195.00 VOLUME XL NUMBER 11 November 2016 The House of a Hundred Stories: A Children’s Fable was launched
in July this year at the India Habitat Centre by Mariam Karim-
Ahlawat, a writer and freelance editor and columnist. Educated at
the Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi and at the Sorbonne in
Paris, she became a university lecturer and has authored children’s
books and books for adults. As a child, Ahlawat and her siblings
were allowed to keep dogs, cats, owls and a mongoose, which inspired
her to love animals and thus, write about them.
This book is a collection of eighteen short stories with, as its title
suggests, a moral at the end of each story. The House of a Hundred
Stories, located near the Taj Mahal, has many animals living in it
such as guinea pigs, rabbits, a dog, a little tabby kitten, a goat kid, a
spotted owl, a baby mongoose, a squirrel, frogs, toads and a pigeon.
The real story begins when the mongoose escapes from a snake
charmer and goes inside the house of a hundred stories. He tells
stories about all the creatures living inside the house of hundred
stories.
Through these stories, Ahlawat teaches many morals such as having good manners, the aim of a
truly civilized society where everyone
has an equal right to comfort and happiness,
the difference between bravery
and courage, the freedom to decide
what is good and bad, being
with one’s own kind, the self-sufficiency
of certain animals versus the
need of other animals to live together,
fear creating hatred, a truly free creature
never manipulating others and
freedom without the freedom to love
who we choose not being freedom.
The House of a Hundred Stories
teaches readers, children and adult alike, that friendship and love
can spring up anywhere and are to be cherished. The last story in
this book contains an inspiring song:
You’re looking for Freedom,
But you must first find Wisdom
For if you’re not wise,
You can never be free
And if you’re not free
You cannot be happee!
The book ends on a happy note, where we learn that the other
animals in The House of a Hundred Stories led full happy lives, in their
own different ways, just as everyone is meant to do. Ahlawat uses
compassion and humanity in her stories to preach the message of
development. She shows that without these ... Table of Contents >> |