In Looking for the Rainbow, Bond travels to his own past, recalling his favourite adventures (and misadventures) with extraordinary charm, splotches of wit, a pinch of poignance and not a trace of bitterness. What youÂre holding, dear reader, is a classic in the making.Ever wanted to buy a book but could not because it was too expensive? This period is full of books, visits to the cinema, music, walks and conversations with his father -- a dream life for a curious and wildly imaginative boy.
A lot of my friends tell me that it is not a big privilege to get a signed book of his as he is quite easily available in a cafe in Dehradun but coming from a small town where you hardly get to see any authors, this was quite special to me.
The center plot of the book is the relationship between father (Mr.
Covalent Bond Vocabulary Chemical Bond Human Animal Bond Valence Bond Theory James Bond Music Express Vol. His parents had separated and his mother isn't very close to him.
His time in the capital is filled with books, visits to the cinema, music and walks and conversations with his fatherÂa dream life for a curious and wildly imaginative boy, which turns tragic all too soon. Veteran author Ruskin Bond's new book is a memoir in which he extensively reminisces about the time he spent with his father.
Published Each vignette offers a nostalgia-tinged view into the life of little Bond with senior Bond and the irrevocably honest understanding they had of each other. Welcome back.
ISBN : 0143441078, 9780143441076 Of brushing off one’s shoes, encounters with snakes and centipedes, and jam, loads of it! May 2017 Buy Looking For The Rainbow online, free home delivery. Rusty adores his father's hobby of stamp collection and This book was a pleasure to read, it brings back those sweet childhood memories. Looking for the Rainbow by Ruskin Bond is his account of his memories with his father. At age eight, Ruskin escapes his jail-like boarding school in the hills and goes to live with his father in Delhi.
Reader will feel the same while pursuing this book.Reading Ruskin Bond never gets old.
Only this time not as Rusty, but as Ruskin himself as he recounts the years spent with his father in Delhi.It’s always about the simpler things in life with the boy from the hills. I have completed reading this book recently.