The Boy who Talked to Trees: Difference between revisions

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'''''The Boy who Talked to Trees''''' is a collection of short stories by [[Yashwant V. Chittal]] who received the [[Sahitya Akademi Award]] in 1983. The book was translated into English by [[B. C. Ramchandra Sharma |Ramachandra Shrama]] and Padma Ramachandra in 1994 published by [[Penguin Books]]. The book includes 13 stories, all set in his birthplace, the village of [[Bankikodla-Hanehalli|Hanehalli]] or in [[Bandra]] a suburban area in the city of Mumbai. Each of the stories in this collection revolves around a situation in which ordinary men and women are subjected to extreme pressures. ''Katheyadalu Hudugi'' ("The Girl Who Became A story") received the National award.
'''''The Boy who Talked to Trees''''' is a collection of short stories by [[Yashwant V. Chittal]] who received the [[Sahitya Akademi Award]] in 1983. The book was translated into English by [[B. C. Ramchandra Sharma|Ramachandra Shrama]] and Padma Ramachandra in 1994 published by [[Penguin Books]]. The book includes 13 stories, all set in his birthplace, the village of [[Bankikodla-Hanehalli|Hanehalli]] or in [[Bandra]] a suburban area in the city of Mumbai. Each of the stories in this collection revolves around a situation in which ordinary men and women are subjected to extreme pressures. ''Katheyadalu Hudugi'' ("The Girl Who Became A story") received the National award.


==References==
==References==
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Latest revision as of 09:28, 2 June 2021

The Boy who Talked to Trees
AuthorYashwant V. Chittal
CountryIndia
LanguageKannada, and English language
GenreShort story collections
PublisherPenguin books
Publication date
1983
Media typePrint

The Boy who Talked to Trees is a collection of short stories by Yashwant V. Chittal who received the Sahitya Akademi Award in 1983. The book was translated into English by Ramachandra Shrama and Padma Ramachandra in 1994 published by Penguin Books. The book includes 13 stories, all set in his birthplace, the village of Hanehalli or in Bandra a suburban area in the city of Mumbai. Each of the stories in this collection revolves around a situation in which ordinary men and women are subjected to extreme pressures. Katheyadalu Hudugi ("The Girl Who Became A story") received the National award.

References[edit]