The Boy who Talked to Trees: Difference between revisions

m
clean up, add source tag
>Materialscientist
m (unsourced)
 
m (clean up, add source tag)
 
Line 24: Line 24:
}}
}}


'''''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==
Line 35: Line 35:


{{India-lit-stub}}
{{India-lit-stub}}
{{en-Wikipedia}}
16,952

edits