Author: Pamela Chatterjee
Publisher: Penguin
Year: 2005
Language: English
Pages: 189
ISBN/UPC (if available): 0670058394
Description
In the Kumaon region of the Himalayas, the mountains are believed to be Dev Bhoomi-the abode of the gods. In a little village here, under the shadow of Trishul and Nanda Devi, Pamela Chatterjee has found a home, after decades spent in the big cities of the plains.
She lives among the villagers as one of them, sharing their daily lives. Here, farmers toil in the fields and hope that the weather is kind to them; women are isolated during their monthly unclean period; and young brides move to a different village, where they spend more time under the watchful eyes of their mothers-in-law than with their husbands.
Yet, as the seasons change from the long spring straight to the monsoons and then the bitterly cold winter, some old beliefs make way for new ones. Farmers agree to put aside ancient cures and adopt new scientific procedures to counter the rapidly spreading foot-and-mouth disease in their livestock, older women struggle with pens as their children show them how to sign their names, and people come together to lay pipes to bring water to an isolated hamlet .
Full of many such memorable vignettes, Listen to the Mountains blends observations of the flora and fauna with descriptions of the culture, traditions and rituals of Kumaon, and is enriched by the wonderfully intimate portrayals of the local people. Adding to the charm of the book are Catherine Addor-Confino’s brilliant illustrations.
REVIEWS
A Himalayan village comes to life in these vignettes, Pamela Chatterjee’s love of the mountains, its wildlife and flora, comes through in these pages, fragrant with pine needles and morning dew.
-Ruskin Bond
Pamela Chatterjee recreates the experience of living in her village in the mountains, where most of us can never be more than tourists-but her book invites us to step right into the houses, to become part of the families and become engaged in their lives.
-Anita Desai
Contents
ACKNOWLEGEMENTS
Author’s Note
Introduction
Spring
Monsoon
Winter