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Outside In

Page 15

by Jennifer Bradbury


  The workers cheer. Nek places a hand on Ram’s shoulder and squeezes gently.

  “Just like you imagined,” Ram says to him.

  “Better.”

  AUTHOR’S NOTE

  A book is never just one idea. I’ve heard other writers talk about how the blending and crashing of big ideas creates the story. This story is fictional but has deep roots in two very real stories. I feel ridiculously fortunate that both were rich with possibility.

  I lived in Chandigarh, India, in 2005. One of the first places my new friends showed me was Nek Chand’s Rock Garden in what is now Sector 1. Like many visitors to this wonderful place, I was amazed. The way Chand repurposed cast-off materials inspired me. The sheer volume and scale of his work humbled me. And the fact that he worked in secret on the garden for almost twenty years intrigued me. My family and I visited the garden again in 2009 when we returned to India to adopt our son. I knew then that I wanted to write this book to learn more about Nek Chand, the need we all have to create, and the magical mingling of story, art, and the world around us.

  The Ramayana itself is a great example of this mingling. First written in Sanskrit in the fourth century BC, it tells the story of Rama, his triumph over Ravana, and his return home. I used to teach selections from it in my high school world literature classes, and I’ve read many of Hanuman’s adventures to my own children. There are hundreds of versions of the Ramayana, all filled with dizzying detail. The version Ram hears in this book is very streamlined. I allowed myself the luxury of curating and winnowing it down to fit this book and parallel Ram’s story.

  I left out and modified a great deal of both Nek’s story and the Ramayana. I encourage you to learn more about the Rock Garden and the real Nek Chand. Begin with the Nek Chand Foundation website (nekchand.com) for information about the artist and his work. To dive deeper into the Ramayana, consider R. K. Narayan’s The Ramayana: A Shortened Modern Prose Version of the Indian Epic.

  Even though I had to give up many wonderful details, Ram showed up very early and quickly claimed this story as his own. He came from many places. He grew out of my own experience of being an outsider in a culture as rich as India’s. He grew out of imagining stories behind the lives of children in India without homes or families to look after them. And he grew out of wanting to write about the new story that is written when a child and a parent find each other.

  As Nek says in this story, sometimes the made-up stories are the truest ones. I hope and believe he is right.

  GLOSSARY

  acha: okay

  auntie: a term of respect for a woman older than the speaker

  bewakoof: dummy or fool

  chai: tea made with milk, sugar, and spices

  chalo: Hindi word meaning “Let’s go.”

  changa: okay

  changa fer?: Good, then?

  dastar: a turban worn by a Sikh man

  Diwali: The Hindu festival of lights. It is widely observed across religions in India, celebrating the triumph of good over evil. It also coincides with the Sikh festival of Bandi Chhor Divas.

  Dussehra: Festival celebrating Rama’s victory over Ravana. It features parades, reenactments of the Ramayana, and the burning of giant straw-filled papier-mâché effigies of Ravana and his minions.

  han/han ji: phrase meaning “yes”

  harmonium: a freestanding keyboard instrument, played like a piano but relying on reeds to produce the sound

  Hindu: a catchall term denoting the many indigenous religions in India

  hoye: oh my

  ji: a suffix showing respect

  kheer: traditional rice pudding dessert

  marg: road or path

  naan: leavened bread traditionally cooked in a tandoor

  nahi: no

  neem: Tree whose leaves and oils are used for medicinal purposes. People have long used peeled branches to clean their teeth.

  oh teri deri: expression of dismay

  oye: wow, whoa, or cool

  pagal: crazy, or nuts

  paisa: 1/100 of a rupee

  pakoras: chunks of vegetables, meat, or cheese, dipped in chickpea flour batter and then deep-fried

  panga: “Taking a panga” means asking for trouble.

  paratha: flatbread

  Punjab: region of northern India and eastern Pakistan

  rangoli: Folk art patterns made on floors of homes to celebrate festivals and welcome Hindu gods. Rangoli are often made with colored rice, flour, grains, or flower petals.

  rickshaw: A sort of taxi used to transport people around. Cycle rickshaws are pulled by bicycles.

  roti: bread

  rupee: basic unit of Indian currency

  samosa: A stuffed, deep-fried pastry. Samosas are often filled with some combination of spices, vegetables, potatoes, and ground meat.

  sari: long strip of unstitched cloth serving as a garment for Indian women

  shukriya: thank you

  Sikh: follower of Sikhism, a faith widely practiced, particularly in the Punjab area of India

  siyappa: “drat” or “shoot”

  tandoor: a traditional clay oven, often heated by a wood fire

  theek hai: all right or fine

  tiffin: light lunch or container used for carrying a light lunch

  tuk-tuk: an auto rickshaw

  uncle: a term of respect for an older man

  wah ji wah: expression of awe

  wallah: Hindi word that can mean a maker of something or deliverer of something

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  As ever, many thanks to Caitlyn Dlouhy for her generosity, patience, and vision. I am thrilled to have a book that not only bears the mark of your green pen but also your name. Thanks to the entire team at Atheneum Books for Young Readers who make stories into real live books. Thanks to Robin Rue and Beth Miller for their encouragement, friendship, and faith in my stories. Thanks to family and friends who motivate me and tolerate me in equal measure, but love me even more. Thanks to early readers of this book in its various forms—Julia Mesplay, Josiah Vellegas, and Stephanie Guerra—your keen eyes and honest reactions helped tremendously. I am indebted to Ibadat Sahney for her guidance in language and customs. Thanks also go out to Neera, Vinod, Vineeta, Ayushee, and all my Bhavan Vidyalaya friends who welcomed me to Chandigarh and made sure I learned about Nek Chand’s marvelous work. And thanks to Jim, Evie, and Arun, for reminding me every day of the joy of making the most of what we have.

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  Jennifer Bradbury is also the author of River Runs Deep; A Moment Comes, which won the South Asia Book Award; Wrapped; and her debut novel, Shift. Shift—which Kirkus Reviews gave a starred review, calling it “fresh, absorbing, compelling”—was picked as an ALA and a School Library Journal Best Book for Young Adults and is also on numerous state reading lists. A former English teacher, she taught in Chandigarh, India, where she first discovered Nek Chand’s remarkable sculptures. She lives with her family in Burlington, Washington.

  A Caitlyn Dlouhy Book

  ATHENEUM BOOKS FOR YOUNG READERS

  Simon & Schuster

  New York

  Visit us at simonandschuster.com/kids

  Authors.SimonandSchuster.com/Jennifer-Bradbury

  Also by Jennifer Bradbury

  A Moment Comes

  River Runs Deep

  Shift

  Wrapped

  ATHENEUM BOOKS FOR YOUNG READERS

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  This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real places are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and events are products of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or places or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  Text copyright © 2017 by Jennifer Bradbury

  Jacket illustration copyright © 2017 by
John Jay Cabuay

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  Book design by Debra Sfetsios-Conover and Irene Metaxatos

  The text for this book was set in ITC Berkeley Oldstyle.

  CIP data for this book is available from the Library of Congress.

  ISBN 978-1-4424-6827-6 (hc)

  ISBN 978-1-4424-6829-0 (eBook)

 

 

 


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