Writing With a Broken Tusk

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Writing With a Broken Tusk began in 2006 as a blog about overlapping geographies, personal and real-world, and writing books for children. Since March 2024, Jen Breach (writer, VCFA graduate, and former student) has helped me curate and manage guest posts and Process Talk pieces on this blog.

The blog name refers to the mythical pact between the poet Vyaasa and the Hindu elephant headed god Ganesha who was his scribe during the composition of the epic narrative, the Mahabharata. It also refers to my second published book, edited by the generous and brilliant Diantha Thorpe of Linnet Books/The Shoe String Press, published in 1996, acquired and republished by August House, now part of Reading Is Fundamental, and still miraculously in print.

Posts on this site reflect personal opinion and commentary protected under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and the First Amendment of the US Constitution.

Guest Post: Ritu Hemnani on Lion of the Sky
middle grade novels Uma Krishnaswami middle grade novels Uma Krishnaswami

Guest Post: Ritu Hemnani on Lion of the Sky

“An exquisite, memorable story about new beginnings and the quest to belong.” That’s how Kirkus Reviews described Ritu Hemnani’s Lion of the Sky. It is a novel about friendship, set against the tormented backdrop of the 1947 Partition of India. Hemnani uses unrhymed verse, with all its lightness and white space, to tell a story with a weighty context and a deeply wrenching storyline. She pulls the challenge off with grace and sensitivity. From the beginning, and through the tumult that is to come, the story anchors us close to the child character, 12-year-old Raj, free as the wind, his most earnest hopes pinned on winning the Kite Festival. Read the opening of this poem, “Daring,” to see what I mean:

I fly/ through the fields of Sindh,/ of wildflowers and birdsong,/ my suthan pants flapping/ cool wind against my cheeks.

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