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Showing posts with label Helen Rundgren. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Helen Rundgren. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Tulika at Bookaroo 2011

Writer and editor Sandhya Rao talks about Indian dinostars, Stone Eggs and the lifelike dino robot that got everyone's attention at Helen Rundgren's session, while writer Swetha Prakash who took Padma to space and to Bookaroo 2011 shares her notes.

Dino Delights 

A chip of fossilized dinosaur eggshell, a tiny piece of dino bone, a real – and sharp! – billions of years old tooth still good for a sharp nick … what more could dino lovers and others have asked for? Kids and others got to touch and feel dino ‘items’ and find out all about Indian dinosaurs thanks to Helen Rundgren’s book with Tulika, Stone Eggs: A Story of Indian Dinosaurs at Bookaroo children’s literature festival in Delhi this past week. 

And yes, she was there too, having flown down from Stockholm especially to participate in Bookaroo. Armed with bananas, an Afghan melon, and her precious dino treasures… what were the bananas for you ask? Well, said Helen, that’s to show how big the T Rex’s teeth may have been. And the Afghan melon? That’s how big and sort of heavy a dino egg might have been. Not bigger? someone asked. Even an ostrich lays eggs almost this big. No, said Helen, because the bigger the egg, the thicker the shell and the more difficult it would be for the little one to emerge. Hmm, something to think about. Also, she pointed out, the thicker the shell, the less porous it will be…. Little ones survive inside eggs because the porous shell allows them to breathe. Hmm, something else to think about.

Children had plenty to think about and guess at, at both of Helen’s sessions at Bookaroo on November 25th, and November 27th, during which it became clear that dinosaurs didn’t just roam somewhere else, but in India as well. In fact, said Helen, we had no dinos in Sweden! But in India there is the Indosuchus raptorius, the Barapasaurus tagorei, the Kotasaurus yamanpalliensis and the king of them all, the Rajasaurus narmadensis… So, feel proud, friends, of your dinosorian past and know that lots of dino egg fossils have been found especially in western, central and south India. Helen threw in a quiz with everyone winning prizes: a lovely poster of the Indian dinostars and tiny dino figurines.

But the star of the sessions was Helen’s nearly real live dino robot pet who completely had everybody mesmerized. Children crowded to watch the dinobot move, blink and pick up stuff from the floor but when they rushed to pet her, she shrank nervously into mama Helen’s dino t-shirt… 

Padma Goes to Bookaroo

Writing has its centre in silence and solitude, whereas the festivals are an unabashed celebration of life. Writing festivals are thus very remarkable, very mysterious. Now just make that a children's literary festival…

For children every moment in time is there just for the moment. They will settle down and be tranquil, with a tranquility that cannot be articulated and yet be perfectly lively all the time. Alive, the way we often forget to be.

The young persons, all well-uniformed, are seated evenly in a line. You are reading and asking some questions. Time passes. Are you narrating to them, or are they narrating to you? Is the text they compose with their innocent and often absurd responses, serene self-command, and joyous disinterest (we are here because our teacher/parent is also here) so much more intelligent and sophisticated than anything you could come up with? 


So, in the end, you’re sort of stuck with being— less speech, more child. Thank you Tulika, thank you Sandhya, thank you Jo, thank you Swati, thank you Shreya and thank you all for providing this amazing text and context.

Friday, May 20, 2011

Dinosaurs In Your Backyard!




Helen Rundgren is an award-winning , lizard-loving Swedish children's writer. Her first book with Tulika- Stone Eggs- is about Indian dinosaurs! This one of its kind book combines fact and fiction and introduces the reader to little-known dinos like the adorably scary Rajasaurus and many, many more. Here’s Helen talking to us about her love for reptiles and the making of Stone Eggs.Order your copy here or here!


 Many of your titles are about dinosaurs.  When and how did you become interested in them?

I am not sure. This interest has been growing for many years but I know that IF I had read more about them as a kid, I'd have been stuck. I loved all animals and wanted to be a scientist, a zoologist. And I did, I became one! But then I did other things. But I would have been a palaeontologist if I had just known the job existed. I am sure.

Do you have a favourite dinosaur? Why?

For some reason I like the long ones. The real sauropods, like Diplodocus and Barapasaurus. Bigger than big and longer than long. I like the shape. Like huge strange giraffes, tipped down, with the long tail in the air.. What if they had patterns like them? Or dots?

How did you make the Indian connection and write a story set here? Did
you face any difficulty in placing the story culturally?

Long story, but I went on a trip to southern India with Swedish writers. There we met Sandhya from Tulika and we started to talk. We met here and there in the following years in different projects and talked a little about one of my dino books. Could that be something for Indian children? Then I read in a newspaper about dino eggs found in India. There we go! I could write a completely new book, about Indian dinosaurs for Indian children. That’s fun! I really liked the idea - and it gave me the opportunity to study the subject.

How did you do your research for the story?

I read all I could find. There isn’t too much. I wrote down a list of the dinosaurs and tried to make a map and then I contacted a well known palaeontologist in India. I found his name in the scientific papers I read. He helped me with all my questions.

You are a former zoologist. Do you have interesting pets at home? Tell us
a little about them!

Helen and Alice
Oh, actually not too many right now but I have had some over the years. Katinka, the Green Iguana, who lived a free life in a tree trunk in our living room. Igor the naughty 1.5 meter Iguana who escaped and frightened our neighbours for weeks. Valdemar, the African monitor I rescued as a baby. He gave me a lot of trouble trying to find him a new home before he got dangerous. Emil the cute little chameleon who I filmed and made a short children’s program about. He sadly died when his food, a cricket, stung his long tongue. The most friendly and lovely one is actually the one I have today. Alice, the Bearded Dragon. She is named after Alice Springs in Australia from where I guess her relatives came. She is a lovely fellow. 

Valdemar, the African Monitor
                               

But I have even had pets other than reptiles: two cats, a dog, turtles, salamanders, toads and frogs. Normal stuff - or more or less normal.

 Have you hunted for fossils and found any?


Yes, a little.  I have been out with diggers in the field. Then you help if you can. I have been at dinosaur digging places filming for television in Canada, Australia and China. In Canada, they found an Allosaur cheek and a lot of teeth that day. I have just found small pieces hanging around but that is thrilling too.

Have you got any interesting responses/questions from children to/on your
dinosaur books?

My first Tyra Tyrannosaurus book is written for quite small children and I have heard about several sleeping with it like a doll. That book is about the fact that you cannot be to sure about how they look, their colour and so on, and that subject has made many children stand up and say:
- But are you sure about that!? Were they green or grey? I think they were pink with red spots!
I have got a lot of nice pieces of art sent to me!

Are you working on a new book currently? Tell us about it.

Yes, two about – dinosaurs.One with babies and one about dino tracks. But my last book was about different animals and their different kind of hearts. A Snail's Heart.No dinosaurs.
I am even working on one about senses, working title: Best Nose of The World.

 Is there anything else that you wish to add?

I love dinosaur tracks. They talk about the animal’s life back then. Footprints, skin impressions, dino dung and egg shells… I hope I can come to India one day and see dinosaur eggs in the field!