000 | 01971nam a22002537a 4500 | ||
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005 | 20250210161958.0 | ||
008 | 250210b |||||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d | ||
020 | _a9789361566271 | ||
037 |
_cPurchased _nCurrent Books, Convent Junction, Market Road, Ernakulam |
||
041 | _aEnglish | ||
082 |
_a816.6 _bMOH/TH |
||
100 | _aMohua Chinappa | ||
245 |
_aTHORNS IN MY QUILT _b: Letters from a Daughter to Her Father |
||
250 | _a1 | ||
260 |
_aNew Delhi _bRupa _c2024 |
||
300 | _g182 | ||
500 | _a‘I miss the long letters we wrote each other when you travelled, which was often.’ Dear Reader, Thorns in My Quilt is a series of letters written by a daughter to her father after he passed away. Unspoken thoughts, unshared memories and unsaid words combine in this searing and poignant account of a relationship filled with joy, but with equal moments of sorrow. Mohua Chinappa (Manu) loved her Baba, who was as kind as he was cruel, as well-read as he was unworldly, as loved as he was unloved. His dearest Manu recollects her childhood in Shillong, infused with the aroma of vanilla essence that went into the butter cookies he baked. She reminisces about her father holding her little hand while helping her through the undulating, rain-drenched roads. Mohua returns to Delhi, where she spent a part of her growing-up years, and revels in the memory of a government house with a harsingar tree. She writes to him about her broken marriage, recalls how her parents left her side, and how she reinvented herself. The letters are often selfish yet strangely cathartic. Her father’s kidney failure prompted a daughter to confront the demons within—the loss, the doubts, the emptiness, the guilt of saying things, and the angst of not saying things. | ||
650 | _aLiterature | ||
650 | _aAmerican literature in English | ||
650 | _aAmerican letters in English | ||
650 | _a 21st Century | ||
942 | _cLEN | ||
942 | _2ddc | ||
999 |
_c194609 _d194609 |