School of authors

The book is a product of a year’s hard work under the guidance of writer-mentors

Update: 2014-12-05 02:36 GMT
Already Published: (Top row) Anjali, Harsha, Sourish, Sharan. (Second row) Shaliyanth Reddy, Abhiram Muttangi, Vishal Kumar, Aahlad. (Third row) Ojasvani, Neha, Rakshit, Neeha, Vrinda Singhal and Sunhita. (Last row) Anisha, Sloka, Shashank Moghe,

A group of students of Sloka Waldorf School, are on cloud nine. They — some as young as 11 — are looking forward to the release of their first book, a collection of short stories titled Incandescence. The book is a product of a year’s hard work under the guidance of writer-mentors Hemant Kumar and Ruchir Mittal, of the Delhi-based publishing house Quill Club Writers.

And besides the book being published, the 24 children say that the experience gifted them with a changed perspective on things and they also now have a greater respect for professional writers.

Incandescence has a range of colourful narratives, from Maoist hostage situations to travelling magicians. In fact, the story on the magician troupe left the gang wondering if  Dhoom 3 writers  had stolen it. But the writers of Way Beyond Magic, however, are taking the similarities lightly. “Yes, there are similarities and we started working on the idea before Dhoom 3 was released,” say Neha and Ojasvani.

The youngest student, Vrinda, 11, who along with Sunhita wrote the piece Extraordinary Knowledge, a story  about a blind boy, his dreams and their interpretations, says, “I have always enjoyed writing, but the workshop helped us put ideas into a narrative and a timeline. Guidance helped.”

The students were part of the complete process — ideating to voting for stories pitched and even editing. So having read all the stories, most students picked Wheel of Destiny as a favourite. The authors Anjali, 12, and Arushi, 13, narrate a story of an artistic child growing up in a scientific environment around scientist-doctor parents. “Her art is stolen when she is 12. So she gives up painting and becomes a researcher. But even then, her discovery comes under the threat of being stolen by a colleague. She decides she will not let this happen again,” they say.

Authors are often considered solitary beings and while working in teams of two was enjoyable to a few long time friends, duos like Anjali and Arushi admit, “We fought more than we wrote. It was a lot of hard work. But still we got to bunk classes.”

Similar News