Little Meena’s Big Adventure
Book Review
Title: A Big
Mystery for Little Meena
Author: Anamika
Kundu
Publisher: Sabre
& Quill, New Delhi, 2026
Pages: 128
When little children are thrown into
the vicious world of arms smugglers, there’s a lot in store for the readers of
their story. When the children belong to two different worlds altogether, there’s
more excitement added. Anamika Kundu brings together a few children from army
personnel’s families that live in a little cantonment and a few others from a
nomadic tribe in Rajasthan in this little novel that can keep young readers
fully engaged from page one to the last.
“The stranger
was big. He was like a giant, Meena thought.” That’s how the novella begins. Eight-year-old
feisty Meena’s adventure begins in those very opening sentences and we follow
her to the end of the story which brings Major Bose of Indian army into the
plot. The birthday celebration of the twin children of Major Bose, Veer and
Lucky, brings Meena’s nomadic family into the life of the Major and his family.
The story
unfolds in a “quaint” cantonment “at the edge of the great Indian desert” where
the trees are “dry, and thorny – more like a bush gone crazy in the heat.”
One day,
Veer, Lucky, and three other children are on their usual adventure into the
desolate spaces that stretch beyond the edge of the Cantt, leading to sand
dunes, when they are shocked into terror by the cry of a little girl: “Bachao!
Mujhe bachao in goondo se!”- Help! Save me from these goons!
Anamika Kundu
weaves a thrilling story of adventure and mystery with these children whose
lives get entangled with the villainous world of a few adults, one of whom is
from Meena’s own tribal world while the “giant” who has taken her captive is
from across the national border. There is ample reason for Major Bose to enter
the plot.
The author is
from a military family. Both her father and her husband were army officers. She
is familiar with their world, the cantonments and life in the border regions.
Hence she is able to make the story credible and utterly realistic. In this
novella too, she blends everyday life with imagination and weaves a thriller
that appeals to young and crossover readers.
Look at a
paragraph from the book for a sample of the realism that marks the narrative:
For the small crowd residing
in the Cantt, schooling was a key requirement. The only English medium school
was in a small town, quite far away and did not have enough capacity to accommodate
all the Army kids, so it was decided by the Station Commander to start a school
in the Cantonment itself, that would be run by their own ladies and families.
Most of the wives of the Army Officers posted there, who were trained teachers
took up the challenge and volunteered to run the school.
In that
little world of some army personnel, their families, and a few nomadic tribal folks,
move a group of children between the innocent milieu of their usual domestic
affairs and the treacherous realms that some adults bring with them. The author’s
spectacular skill is that she never lets the adult-world viciousness darken the
children’s world of curiosity and adventure.
In magnifying
a child’s little adventure into a grand plot that touches upon the nation’s
security, Anamika Kundu reminds us that childhood is not trivial; rather, it is
a world where curiosity is courage and imagination is power.
PS.
I was gifted a copy of the book by the author
herself as part of a prize I won in a blog hop organized by ECM.

Your last paragraph tells it all. Childhood is not trivial, as curiosity and imagination transform themselves into courage and power, in the world of children. We are accustomed to associating chivalry and valour only with adults.
ReplyDeleteHari OM
ReplyDeleteYour review, as always, intrigues... and this seems the perfect book to review in your month about education and the young! YAM xx