Showing posts with label m. anu narasimhan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label m. anu narasimhan. Show all posts

Friday, February 13, 2015

Book Review - The Little Parrot and the Angel's Tears


The Little Parrot and the Angel's Tears 

Written and Illustrated by: M. Anu Narasimhan
Publisher: Mascot Books
Publication Date: February 2015
ISBN: 978-1631770142
Reviewed by: Holly Connors
Review Date: February 2015

It was a beautiful day in the forest. All the animals were playing and enjoying the sunshine, even the little parrot. Every day they’d play, and every day they had lots and lots of fun. But there was something that bothered the parrot – he was little. His friends the elephant, the deer and even the rabbit didn’t seem to notice, but still, the parrot often thought about his small size. He wanted to be big like his friends. Soon, however, the parrot would learn that one’s value is not measured by size but by heart, and love for friends.

One day, while the parrot is up high in a tree, getting ready to fly down to meet his friends, he spots danger. Off in the distance he sees the trees of the forest on fire! Immediately, the parrot takes flight to get away from the fire, but then he remembers his friends. They don’t have wings, only feet. How can they get away from the fire?

Our little feathered friend, determined to help his friends, flies to their aid. He tries to lift the elephant, but no matter how briskly his wings flutter, he simply can’t lift his elephant friend. In desperation, the parrot flies to a nearby stream to gather water in his wings and dump it on the flames. Back and forth he goes, but his attempts to squash the fire with what little water he can carry, do nothing to calm the flames.

Devtas (pronounced dayv-tuhs), divine spirits who roam the earth, see what the parrot is doing and laugh at his efforts. Undaunted, the parrot continues to try and put out the fire.

“Laugh if you must but these are friends of mine
I will not stop until the fire I put out
I have work to do! This talking I can do without!”


All the Devtas but one continue to laugh. The one who doesn't laugh sees how the parrot is trying to save his friends and is touched by the bird's love. Would this spirit somehow help save the little parrot’s friends?

The Little Parrot is a re-telling of a tale that the author’s grandmothers used to tell her, inspired by their South Asian heritage. Narrated in rhyme, it flows well and really meshes nicely with the simple but quite bright and pleasing artwork. For those with young ones who frighten easily, don’t fear – there is nothing scary in The Little Parrot. The Devtas smile, laugh and, in the case of the one who takes pity on the parrot, help out. This is the type of story that puts a smile on your face as you read the last page and will stay with you long after closing the book.

Quill says: A delightful story for young and old about the selfless acts of one little bird.








Wednesday, February 4, 2015

Books In For Review

Another nice batch of books have just arrived for review.  Check them out!





The Curse of Anne Boleyn by C. C. Humphreys Description not yet available.  

The Little Parrot and the Angel's Tears by M. Anu Narasimhan The little parrot is very small. Hes smaller than his friend the elephant. Hes smaller than his friend the deer. Hes even smaller than his friend the rabbit. But when his friends and home are in danger, the little parrot decides he has to do something to help. Find out if the little parrot can save them from a big problem.  

White Gardenia by Belinda Alexandra In a district of the city of Harbin, a haven for White Russian families since Russia’s Communist Revolution, Alina Kozlova must make a heartbreaking decision if her only child, Anya, is to survive the final days of World War II. White Gardenia sweeps across cultures and continents, from the glamorous nightclubs of Shanghai to the austerity of Cold War Soviet Russia in the 1960s, from a desolate island in the Pacific Ocean to a new life in post-war Australia. Both mother and daughter must make sacrifices, but is the price too high? Most importantly of all, will they ever find each other again?  

The Glittering World by Robert Levy When up-and-coming chef Michael “Blue” Whitley returns with three friends to the remote Canadian community of his birth, it appears to be the perfect getaway from New York. He soon discovers, however, that everything he thought he knew about himself is a carefully orchestrated lie. Though he had no recollection of the event, as a young boy, Blue and another child went missing for weeks in the idyllic, mysterious woods of Starling Cove. Soon thereafter, his mother suddenly fled with him to America, their homeland left behind. But then Blue begins to remember. And once the shocking truth starts bleeding back into his life, his closest friends—Elisa, his former partner in crime; her stalwart husband, Jason; and Gabe, Blue’s young and admiring coworker—must unravel the secrets of Starling Cove and the artists’ colony it once harbored. All four will face their troubled pasts, their most private demons, and a mysterious race of beings that inhabits the land, spoken of by the locals only as the Other Kind...

Her Name Is Rose by Christine Breen In a cottage in the west of Ireland, Iris--gardener and mother to an adopted daughter, Rose--is doing her best to carry on after the death of her husband two years before. At the back of her mind is a promise she never intended to keep, until the day she gets a phone call from her doctor. Meanwhile, nineteen-year-old Rose is a brilliant violinist at the Royal Academy in London, still grieving for her father but relishing her music and life in the city. Excited but nervous, she hums on the way to an important master class, and then suddenly finds herself missing both of her parents when the class ends in disaster. After the doctor’s call, Iris is haunted by the promise she made to her husband--to find Rose’s birth mother, so that their daughter might still have family if anything happened to Iris. Armed only with a twenty-year-old envelope, Iris impulsively begins a journey into the past that takes her to Boston and back, with unexpected results for herself and for Rose and for both friends and strangers.