logo
  New Login   
image

--


Avinandan Mukherji

STONE EGGS: A STORY ABOUT INDIAN DINOSAURS
By Helen Rundgren illustrated by Soumya Menon
Tulika Publishers, Chennai, 2011, pp. 26, 150.00

TALES OF HISTORIC DELHI: A WALK THROUGH ITS MANY CITIES
By Premola Ghose
Young Zubaan, New Delhi, 2011, pp. 62, 225.00

THE ENCHANTED SAARANG: STORIES FROM KASHMIR
By Asha Hanley illustrated by Proiti Roy
Tulika, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India, 2011, pp. 99, 385.00

VOLUME XXXV NUMBER 11 NOVEMBER 2011

Stone Eggs by Helen Rundgren and illustrated by Soumya Menon is a book I wished I had had when I was a kid. Sankar's inability to believe that the round stones could be dinosaur eggs reminded me of my first plant fossils and the shock I had received on realizing what they actually were. Reading about fossils in American and British books a whole generation of us had grown up believing that fossils and stuff were to be found only in Devonshire and certain South American deserts. But children today know better, and much of the credit goes to books like Stone Eggs. When I saw Stone Eggs first I was reminded of From Bone to Stone by Karen Haydock. Haydock's book sets into motion a catchy jingle about '... the big/Triceratops/That was killed in a fight/One Saturday night. /(67 million years ago)', and tells the story of how the bones eventually turn to stone to be discovered by the child and the final illustration shows some men and women in 'Indian' attire digging at the fossilized Triceratops skeleton. In Stone Eggs, the child becomes children with names—Sandhya and Sankar, and even the palaeontologists receive names. The dino relics are no resident of some subtropical Neverland but something that is discovered quite close to Grandma's place. Finding dino fossils in one's grandma's yard might sound like quite a tale, but anyone who has some idea of the geology of India would know that India is quite an unexplored treasure trove especially when it comes to fossils. The journey we had begun with From Bone to Stone completes a full circle with Stone Eggs. The charts, info bubbles, maps and geological timelines scattered throughout the book make it informative while being entertaining. Helen Rundgren explains in charmingly simple language an idea that had taken scientists more than three hundred years to accept—the continental drift theory. And Soumya Menon's illustration of India on her way to meet the (or rather, create the) Himalayas along Africa's east coast adds to the fun. Her dinosaurs with their grins, sneers and startled expre-ssions are independent individuals with defining characteristics, and the baby dino peeping out of an egg with some of the shell on its head on the page titled Dino Eggs is perhaps one of the cutest dinosaurs drawn in history! Having always cherished the desire to become a ...


Table of Contents >>
Please or to Read Entire Article
«BACK

Free Access Online 12 Back Issues
with 1 year's subscription
Archive (1976-2011)
under construction.