children
-

For children: A new book brings the heartbreaking stories of animals caught in wars
Nandini Nayar
-

‘What is in life cannot be ignored in books’: Duckbill editor Sayoni Basu on publishing for children
Sayari Debnath
-

For children: How will Rajat get one hundred rupees for the boatman to take him across the river?
Poonam Desai
-

For children: Climate change, global warming and practical solutions that can actually help
Ranjit Lal
-

‘Itihashe Hatekhari’: These children’s books link history to everyday life in the present and past
Norah Das Rami
-

Hindu mythology for young readers: A retelling of Shiva Purana and how the Jyotirlingas came to be
Samhitha Reddy
-

‘The School for Bad Girls’: Rule-breakers who became trailblazers of Indian women’s liberation
Ananya Kaushik
-

For children: How human encroachment has forced tigers to become resilient and instinctive
S Eardley-Wilmot
-

For children: Amazing stories of how roller skates (and other interesting things) came to India
Mala Kumar
-

‘A demand for picture books’: A children’s publisher surveys the field
Chitwan Mittal
-

A new book tells young readers about alopecia areata, or hair loss, in children
Ratna Manucha
-

For children: A teenaged prince Ram stumbles upon a secret plot to steal a divine weapon
RK Singh
-

Folk tales for children: How the Myntdu, Myntang and Umiurem rivers in Meghalaya came to be
Sobhona Bhattacharjee Utsa Bose
-

For children: A story written in verse about a young orphan looking for ways to heal
Varsha Seshan
-

What Chandrababu Naidu really means when he calls for Andhra couples to have more children
Divya Aslesha
-

By Rudyard Kipling: Mowgli is advised by Bagheera to stay vigilant of Shere Khan
Rudyard Kipling
-

Why chef Shilarna Vaze has written a recipe book and nutrition guide for mothers with young children
Shilarna Vaze
-

How the kidnapping and murders of young siblings Geeta and Sanjay Chopra in 1978 changed Delhi
Sudeep Chakravarti
-

Gujarat: Suspected Chandipura virus deaths rise to 20
Scroll Staff
-

YA fiction: Here, speakers have to buy words, but things change when Asha and Zeb try graffiti
Payal Kapadia