Maya Running (Pocketbook)

Author: Anjali Banerjee
See more in Humorous Stories
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Ships from and sold by Better World Books
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Condition: Used-Acceptable
Format: Pocketbook
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Product Summary
Format: Pocketbook
ISBN: 9780553494242
Publisher: Laurel-Leaf Books
Publish Date: 8/8/2006
Buy.com Sku: 202132571
Item#: R5DYWJ
Pages: 160
Age Range: 16 to 21
 
Maya Mukherjee doesn' t fit in. She was born in India and her parents moved to Canada when she was a baby. Now it' s the 1970s, and she' s a middle schooler in Manitoba, land of moose and snow. She wants to run on the tundra beneath the Northern Lights, make igloos or snow-angels, see John Travolta, and ride elephants through the Bengal jungle the way her great-grandfather did. Then her gorgeous cousin Pinky comes from India for a visit, bringing a statue of the god Ganesh, the Remover of Obstacles. Maya asks Ganesh to remove all obstacles to her dreams. Like most wishes, it backfires in hilarious and painful ways. Maya must journey across continents to restore the truth and find out who she is.

"From the Hardcover edition."
 
 
 

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D Dr. Ghose's mouth blows Bengali bubble-words, which the boys understand. I can tell by the way their bodies shift, the way they nod at the right moments. Bengali is part of their lives, like combing oil through their glistening hair or praying to Hindu gods.
Envy digs into me, a craving to understand Bengali.
"Baba, I'm not hungry," Sahadev whines, pushing the glasses up on his nose.
"Me either, I want to play," says Vishnu, the great god with his underwear showing.
"Ah, come, you love samosas, homemade, lovely, lovely," Dad says from the doorway. He does the Indian sideways head nod around Indian friends. It's like Halloween. He wears his Canadian costume for Canadians, the Indian costume for Indians.
As Indian tradition dictates, the children eat first. Mrs. Ghose and Mum hover in the background, filling plates and glasses. I sit very still and eat with knife and fork, keeping my elbows off the table, while the boys stuff their faces wit
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