Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Baby’s Day Out

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Books for Indian kids are tricky. Avoid the ones that force-feed morals. Forget those India-exotic tales aimed at NRI kids. And swerve from endless retellings of folktales and myths. Try these Mumbai-themed books instead:

MY CITY, MY DOGS

In the Mumbai of this book, stray dogs run the city. They help traffic police with their duties, play with security guards, run alongside marathontr­ainers, and take the first-class compartmen­t of the local train. You don’t have to be a kid to enjoy the text and illustrati­ons, just someone who likes dogs.

366 WORDS IN MUMBAI

How to get kids aged 4 and above to understand Mumbai? By pointing out familiar sights like lampposts, ferries, crows, festivals, buildings and food. The Mumbai edition of the popular series is a child’sview eye of details adults take for granted. When you’re done with the 366 words, go back and finda hidden ‘M’ on every page.

GOOD NIGHT MUMBAI

There’s a Good Night book for everything, it would seem: trains, campsites, mermaids, fire engines, dump trucks, Miami, Rajasthan and more. The Mumbai edition lets kids say good night to Elephanta Island, the museum in Colaba, the aquarium, Hanging Gardens, seasides, temples and mosques before they nod off. The most feel-good read to end a long day.

HOME AWAY FROM HOME

Written a nd illustrate­d by teachers at Mumbai Mobile Creches, a non-profit that runs centres for children of migrant constructi­on labourers, it’s a glimpse into a side of the city even adults don’t often get to see. There’s friendship, theft, fitting in, and, of course, a mystery.

SAMEER’S HOUSE

Where does Sameer live? The answer zooms out from Sameer’s Mumbai home, to his street, city, state, country planet and ultimately, the universe. A fantastic way to teach kids how everything and everyone is connected. And for adults to enjoy a bird’s (and ultimately a creator’s) eye view of us.

PEOPLE CALLED MUMBAI

The children’s edition of the popular book puts a kid-friendly spin on what usuall y comes off as cliché: street food, potters, Kolis, the film studios. A story of Mumbai via 20 lives of actual inhabitant­s, it’ salo vely way to remind yourse lf that we’re real ly n o different from each other.

WHAT MAYA SAW

When young Maya is completing a project about Mumbai’s history at summer school , things start to get very weird. There’s something otherworld­y going on and the trail of clues covers the city’s history, bylanes , foods, buses, structur es and people. And you thought the city couldn’t possibly tell any new stories.

TREASURE AT THE TRAIN STATION

If all you notic eat CSMT station is the indicator announcing the next departing local, perhaps you need a children’s book to get a better view. This one brings some of the animal sculptures to life with a n adventure about a missing jewel, a grandfathe­r, his twin grandchild­ren, and the city.

TOTALLY MUMBAI

Kids see a completely different city from adults and it often pays to switch to a more innocent view. Totally Mumbai has a sense of humou r about the big city, so facts about mangroves, birdlife, ghosts, street names and fires seem less dry. Wh ok nows? It might answer a few grown-up questions too.

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