Forever

Forever . . . by Judy Blume

Forever is viewed through a nostalgic haze by many of my generation.  Growing up in the eighties and early nineties, Judy Blume was the author to walk a young girl through the changes in her life, her body and her heart as she headed toward adulthood.  I never read Forever as a teen, so I’m afraid my opinions are not at all tempered by warm and fuzzy feelings about a book that was, back in the day (1975 for those who are curious), groundbreaking.

What’s the big deal about Forever? Well, it talked about sex.  Extremely explicitly.  It also raised the question of contraception which is still controversial in many circles.  But these days, to many teens, these are no longer shocking topics.  Nor is Forever the only book in town that will allow teens to read about teens getting their lovin’ on.  So other than being the first of its genre, does Forever have a lot going for it?  Would I give it to a teen who wanted to read about these issues?

Honestly, I just can’t say that I would recommend it.  In the first few chapters Kath meets her boyfriend, at which point they have some getting to know you conversations that basically indicate that they have nothing in common. After which they get together, fall madly in love and have some sex. I appreciate that many teen relationships are without a major connection, I still think it’s sort of selling teens short. There is teen love like Katherine’s which isn’t based on much, but there’s also a whole lot of teen love out there that is based on some type of deep connection however fleeting. There’s this crazy sense of closeness when you’re a teen and with someone who you feel understands you. I don’t ever see that from Katherine or Michael. I see a lot of teen lust. Which is fine, but shouldn’t really be confused with love. There’s also that Michael does a lot of pressuring her for sex while claiming that he’s not pressuring her.  Just about every time she says no to something, he comes back with why? He also promises not to try things and then tries things.  While these are certainly true for guys out there, there are a lot of great guys that don’t try to argue girls into sex. And since Michael’s being set up as one of the good guys here, it would be great if he were more respectful.  Also, for all of the sex ed info in the book, I didn’t like how VD (as it was called back in the day) was treated almost as a joke. I guess the book was originally published before AIDS, but for a book to put all the weight on birth control and so little consideration to STDs is concerning for today’s audience.

And therefore, the question lurking in the back of my mind was  “Has Forever been updated?”  Those of you familiar with Blume will know that Are You There God… was updated to remove sanitary belts which would require a person over the age of forty and a diagram to try to explain to today’s kids.   Well Forever has been updated, but for the copies I was able to find, it was not updated in the actual text.  Instead, there’s a one page preface.  I want a quick show of hands, how many of you read the preface?  Okay, now think really hard about any teenagers you might know, or yourself as a teen.  Would you have read the preface then?  Also, libraries don’t always have copies with this shiny new safe sex preface. (You can read more about updates to Blume books here.)  I would have much rather seen the actual Planned Parenthood visit updated to reflect today’s practices rather than the insertion of the oft-ignored preface.

I’d also like to cite Blume for completely unnecessary negative body image moments.  One character is repeatedly referred to as fat.  Both Katherine and her mother are 5’6 and 109 pounds, which is certainly on the tiny side by today’s standards.  That doesn’t stop Katherine’s dad’s  from warning her mom that she will develop flabby thighs if she doesn’t work out.  This is brought up more than once.  Yes, please, let’s send a message to teens that when you weigh 109 pounds you should worry about flab.

About the only good thing in this book was the positive open discussion between parents and their children about sex.  So go that.  Look, I certainly think that Forever has earned it’s place in young adult history. I just sort of wish it would stay there.

Sex, Nudity, Dating – The very first line of the book reveals that a girl has been laid by at least six different guys (this is the same girl who later gets pregnant, cementing the connection between sleeping around and getting knocked up – don’t worry if you love the person and have only one partner, this could never happen to you.  Except that it can.)  Katherine was broken up with by a guy who only wanted to have sex with her.  There’s tongue kissing, bra removal.  Erica finds used rubbers near her house.  Michael asks if Katherine’s a virgin on their first date.  Nothing like getting that out of the way fast.  Katherine once had a babysitter who liked to sniff her father’s clothes, not while he was wearing them mind you, but ew.  Erica and Katherine discuss sex openly, whether it should be about love, or just physical.  Grandma kindly warns Katherine to be careful of pregnancy and venereal disease.  Katherine tells what it’s like when she overhears her parents having sex.  When Artie doesn’t make a move on Erica fast enough she asks him if he’s “queer.”  There is dry humping to orgasm and a fairly detailed description of a hand job.  Katherine talks to her mom about when her mom first had sex.  Katherine visits a Planned Parenthood to get a prescription for the Pill which is the birth control she wants to use. Although she is tested for gonorrhea there’s no real discussion of STDs.  A friend of Katherine’s gets pregnant, doesn’t know who the father is, doesn’t have an abortion, hides the pregnancy from her parents (fairly easily because “she’s so fat”) and lied to the doctor about being married.  Both Erica and Katherine determine that they’d have an abortion in a minute.  And of course, our big winner, multiple explicit sex scenes.  Really.  Like, insert Tab A to Slot B explicit.  No euphemisms here!
Profanity– “bullshit,” “fuck/fucking,” “damn,” “bitch,” “shit,” “wise-ass,” “screwed,” “humped,” “fucked up”
Death, Violence and Gore – Katherine’s parents don’t want her to “park” with a boy, not because of anything she and the boy might do together, but because apparently there are lots of crazies who like to prey on young couples who are parking.  Anyone else heard any good ghost stories lately?  Is this still a concern (no really, I’m serious, is it?) A character’s grandparent dies.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – In describing her mom, Katherine says that her mother can “polish off as much beer as she wants.”  Michael’s older sister and her husband smoke a joint.  Michael admits that he sometimes smokes with them and Katherine has tried it before and didn’t like it.  Michael and Erica get drunk.  Legally.  Because way back when this was written the drinking age was 18.  At a party, lots of kids smoke grass.  Pretty much all the main characters have a least one drink at some point.
Frightening or Intense Things – A friend threatens and then attempts suicide and is sent to a psychiatric hospital.

 

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Anna and the French Kiss

Anna and the French Kiss by Stephanie Perkins

One of my friends once said that there should be a long compound German word meaning “nostalgia for a past that never was”.  I wish that word existed because that’s exactly what this book makes me feel.  I most certainly never went to boarding school in Paris only to fall madly in love, but this book makes me wish I were back in high school.  Certainly not my high school though, Anna’s.

I’ve read Anna and the French Kiss twice now and the uncomfortable moments (and yes, there are many) still make me squirm, the drunken confrontations still make me simultaneously wince and cheer and the incredibly well-written moments of tension between the main characters as they are falling for each other still make me wish for that tingly goosebumpy feeling of first love again.

Great for: Teen romance plus ideal location is a big win.

Sex, Nudity, Dating – Well, yes, yes, there is.  The sex all occurs off screen, and our main character is very much a self-proclaimed virgin who is not ready for that, but we are aware that other characters have sex.  There is no specific nudity other than that involved in changing clothes.  There are rather descriptive passages about kissing, using tongue while kissing, pressing together while kissing and dirty dancing.  Some groping is mentioned.  They read Like Water for Chocolate in English class and relate that it has LOTS of sex in it, including how a man and woman “do it” on a horse?  I haven’t read Like Water for Chocolate, so I have no clue if I’m relating that properly.  The dorm director keeps condoms outside his door.  Anna mentions that her brother was either an accident or a last ditch attempt to save a failing marriage.   There’s some lewd hamming it up around Victor Noir’s Monument.  One man (adult, not teen) has mistresses.  A friend from back in the US mentions pregnant teens at the high school.
Profanity– “dick,””suck,” “frigging,” “ass” and “arse,” “asshole,” the finger is given both American and UK V-shaped versions, “Christ,” “shiz” and “shite,” “balls,” not used the sports equipment sense. “jerkwad,” “crap,” “God,” “screw it,” “hell,” “sod,” “wanker,” “darn,” “tit,” “bastard,” “fuck/fucking” more than once “bugger,””bloody,” “git,” “douchebag,” “motherhumping,” “ass clown,” “bitch,” “slutbag,” and “dyke” absolutely used in a negative way.
Death, Violence and Gore – A main character has a parent with cancer.  Anna’s father has made his fortune writing about people who “Fall in Love and then contract Life-Threatening Diseases and Die.”  Anna worries about her brother if she goes away to school, that he’ll be kidnapped by a creepy man or eat something he’s allergic to and possibly die.  A threat to gauge a boy’s eyes out with a figurine.  Evidently there are occasional fistfights over washing machines.  In retelling a book, St. Clair explains how Rasputin was killed, for those of you unfamiliar, it involved cyanide, gunshots, beating and throwing him in the river.  He also overshares about Rasputin’s cremation.    A girl fantasizes about how she would pull another girls hair and gauge out her eyes were they ever in a catfight.  A girl shoves another girl, a boy punches another boy.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – Anna says she knows people in France drink a lot of wine and smoke a lot of cigarettes.  A boy makes a pyramid of beer bottles.  Sixteen year olds can drink wine and beer but you have to be eighteen to drink hard alcohol.  A boy was expelled for having coke in his backpack.  Some dorm residents drunk dance in the stairwell.  Many of the many characters are drunk at one point or another, at least two are drunk to the point of vomiting.
Frightening or Intense Things – None.

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Boy Meets Boy

Boy Meets Boy by David Levithan

I hadn’t meant to go with another Levithan so quickly folks, but I’ve been slacking in the book reading department (I’m visiting my grandmother) so here it is.

This is the kind of book that you pick up off the shelf because the cover is so cute.  Luckily, it’s pretty cute inside too.  It took me a little while to get used the the writing style, which is present tense and definitely trying to sound cool, but once I got into the story I didn’t mind it.

Levithan has created a world where acceptance is the norm.  It’s a wonderful way of sharing hope for the future, but it also allows his love story to unfold without any drama over the “issue” of being gay and all the focus instead on the characters and their feelings towards each other.  Boy Meets Boy has many of the essential elements for a fun teen romance, from best friend drama to dance planning committees (perhaps you don’t consider this essential, but there’s nothing like a high school dance for teen love) to grand gestures.

Great for: This is a pretty sweet gay romance and surprisingly short on both sex and controversial issues.  Perfect for boys who want to read a book about love that serves as an escape rather than an reminder of the obstacles they may face.

Sex, Nudity, Dating – This is a book about a boy who likes boys, so if you’re not comfortable with that, skip it.   Other than that, this book is pretty tame in this category.  There is definitely kissing, between boys and other boys and girls and boys.  There is a transgender character who is both homecoming queen and quarterback of the football team.  There is discussion that a male/female couple may be having sex.  The starring couple of the book at one point grasps at each other and explores each other while kissing.  No clothing is removed.
Profanity– “fag,” “queer,” “faggot,” “hell,”
Death, Violence and Gore – As little kids, Joni and Paul play an “avoid death” game which involves one person suggesting a possible fatal event and the other naming something also slightly awful and gory to avoid dying from the first event.  Joni threatens to beat someone up, then does.  Wrestlers try to beat Paul up but he is protected by the fencing team.  Some boys are about to fight.  There is a very brief mention of a football player who died in a car accident.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – There’s a mention of people hanging out at the “Queer Beer Bar.”  Ted makes a drunk phone call.
Frightening or Intense Things – None.

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Dash and Lily’s Book of Dares

Dash & Lily’s Book of Dares by Rachel Cohn and David Levithan

Kicking off our month o’ love, here’s a little Christmas in July, a wintery romance to cool off to.

Dash isn’t exactly a people person, but that doesn’t mean he isn’t looking for that special someone. When he encounters a slim red notebook in the Salinger section at The Strand, he begins an adventure that just might lead him to an interesting girl.

Lily’s brother has decided it’s time she falls in love. He and his boyfriend devise a plan. They arrange clues in a notebook which is strategically hidden, hoping to lure in the right boy for Lily.

Dash and Lily’s Book of Dares is written by Rachel Cohn and David Levithan, the writing team responsible for Nick & Norah’s Infinite Playlist. This is definitely for teens who are smart, quirky, off-beat and at the fringes of the crowd, as neither Dash and Lily are particularly social creatures. It will be best enjoyed by teens who have the intelligence to get the wordplay and mature enough to handle the language and sexuality.

Vocabulary that will make you think: Decemberist, Bolshevik, philatelist, titillating erudition, gentrified bohemia, bourgeois hypocrisy.

Great for: Fans of Nick & Norah’s Infinite Playlist, either the book or the movie. This is also the kind of YA book that adults often enjoy.

Finally, as this set over the winter break, it’s a fun Christmas read.

Sex, Nudity, Dating – Well, yes. All three. It’s tricky because not much sexual actually happens, but in certain relationships depicted in the book it seems that you could fairly assume the couple is having sex. There are jokes about sex, including both muppet sex and nun sex (at this point you’re either dying to read this or about to click away from the blog!). Arousal is mentioned. Some characters report getting to third base and there is a part where characters remember pretending to “go down” on wax sculptures.
LGBT – There are multiple characters that fall into this category most significantly Lily’s brother who is in a stable serious relationship. Dash has gay friends. Lily sings with a guy and his boi. A club bouncer is described as a she-man.
Profanity – “darndest”, “fuck” multiple times, also fucking more than once – I believe both in verb and adjective form, “ass”, “hell”, “shit” (in English and French), “frickin’,”  “suckage/suckahs/Mothersucker”, “prick,” “damn,” The middle finger is used.
Death, Violence and Gore – Dash mentions liking French films about mass murder.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – Lily’s caroling group drinks chocolate laced with peppermint liqueur.  Dash’s dad gives him 100 dollars and tells him not to spend it all on booze and women.  Lily gets drunk.
Frightening or Intense Things – Lily is a bit emotionally scarred by the loss of some childhood pets.

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July Beach Reads: Teen Romance

HEY WAIT! DON’T CLICK AWAY! JUST SCROLL DOWN FOR A LIST OF BEACH READS IF YOU DON’T FEEL LIKE READING MY CHATTER, CLICK ON THE LINKS TO READ MORE!

Sweet heavens I am ready for vacation.  I simply do not have room in my head for one more thoughtful thought.  I need beaches and salt water and books that are both light and delightful.  This month is for teen romance in all of its wonderful shapes and forms.  So maybe you need something on the fluffy side and can’t possibly take another book about a girl who works in publishing/advertising/the last independent bookstore on earth who is secretly in love with her best friend’s man/her boss/her friend and will need to get obliteratingly drunk/lose 20 pounds/find herself/start her own business before she finds the right person to shag?  I’ve got that for you.  Plenty of teen angst, possible best friend man stealing, but absolutely no ridiculous careers that none of us can actually have.  But perhaps you’re not the one with a book problem this month.  Maybe your teen is sighing heavily over Our Town or heaving David Copperfield at the wall in a fit of rage and basically swearing to never open another book after dealing with this year’s required summer reading list.  I swear, there are books this month to tempt even the most persnickety anti-reader.  Come on.  You know you want to know if he likes her or like likes her (or him, I promise diversity this month folks)!  Put your hair in a side ponytail (they’re back in), grab beach gear and get ready to fall in love.

Can’t wait for new suggestions?
Try Bewitching Season – Victorian England, fancy dress balls, witchcraft…
or it’s smuttier sequel Betraying Season if you like a bit o’ the Irish.
Or go ahead and buy The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau-Banks reviewed by me here.
But if you’re an adult? Feel free to reread your copy of Forever . . . I’m reviewing it later this month, and folks, it’s not going to be pretty.

Mid-month update:
I’m still blogging away over here, but so far, I’ve read:
Dash and Lily’s Book of Dares – Have Christmas in July with this wintery scavenger hunt that sends Dash off to look for the right girl.
Boy Meets Boy – a gay romance in a world where for the most part, people aren’t treated differently because of who they love.
Anna and the French Kiss – What could be more romantic than boarding school in Paris?
Flavor of the Week – Can Cyril cook his way into Rose’s heart? Includes recipes! Like for cookies, yum.
The Summer I Turned Pretty – Belly’s always spent the summer at her mom’s best friend’s houses. But this year she’s determined to be seen as a grown-up by the boys.
Continue reading about Belly in It’s Not Summer Without You and We’ll Always Have Summer
One of my favorites My Most Excellent Year!
Go on an exciting scavenger hunt through Europe with 13 Little Blue Envelopes.

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Secret Keeper

Secret Keeper by Mitali Perkins

When Asha’s father leaves to find a job in New York, his two daughters and wife must move to Calcutta to live with his brother’s family.  Without their father and in a new city, the girls lives become restricted almost entirely to one house.  With their mother suffering from depression, the girls are often denied their only advocate and must submit entirely to the will of their relatives.  Living in such close quarters means that secrets that have been kept are slowly unraveled, while new secrets are jealously guarded.  A heart-breaking turn of events only serves to increase the stakes.

Asha is a fabulous character, strong and smart in a time and place where beauty and obedience are prized above all.   Proof of her coolness:  Asha edits books when reading aloud to her cousins so that they reflect her values, changing all references to white or fair girls and praising their character instead of their beauty.

I’ve categorized this as tween as well as teen because there is so much about changing bodies and how society expects us to change personally to match our physical selves.  I think it’s very relevant for tweens even if the characters are a bit older and the content slightly more mature.

Great for: This is a pretty special coming of age novel although it is heartbreaking at times, in a way that some teens will probably find displeasing.

Sex, Nudity, Dating – Reet gets unwanted attention from men, including harassment (physical at times).  Asha records crushes in her diary.  We hear about when Asha first got her period.  Girls discuss their figures and breast sizes and how men stare at them.  There’s talk of wanting a boy.  Their grandmother explains that some men will wait after marriage until girls are ready.
Profanity– Asha mutters “a forbidden swearword” under her breath.
Death, Violence and Gore – There is a death in the family that changes the course of everyone’s life.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – The girls’ father chain smokes.
Frightening or Intense Things – The girls’ mother suffers from depression.

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Seaglass Summer


Seaglass Summer by Anjali Banerjee

I am so glad to have found this book!  So many books featuring Indian main characters are best for teens or tweens, but this is completely appropriate for third and fourth graders.  Besides, it features animals which is usually a big hit with kids that age.

Poppy has always dreamed of being a veterinarian.  This summer she’s getting one step closer to her goal.  While her parents make their annual trip to visit family back in India, Poppy is staying with her Uncle Sanjay, a real vet.  But as soon as she gets to the island, things start going wrong.  Uncle Sanjay’s dog is too exuberant for Poppy’s taste.  The tailgate of his truck is broken and her suitcase falls out and opens into a stream. Among the lost items is the real vet kit Poppy saved up for.  And worst of all, when she gets to the clinic, Poppy just can’t seem to get anything right. Over the course of the summer, Poppy learns how to get closer to her goal and that things aren’t always as simple as they seem.

I would have liked to see the relationship between uncle and niece more developed, but overall it was a cute book.  I also appreciated that while Poppy is certainly Indian and her culture is mentioned throughout, it’s not an issues book.  I feel like it can be hard to find books about minorities that have themes other than dealing with issues relative to belonging to a particular culture.  While these books are important, it’s also good to be able to offer children books where the culture is present without the issues being the main focus.  For children, books that move away from the issues can help make other cultures seem more accessible because they can connect with other aspects of the book, and then once they are interested in learning more can move on to weightier books.

Sex, Nudity, Dating – There’s some discussion of neutering dogs and dog testicles.  Puppies are born.
Profanity– A woman curses under her breath, but we don’t know what she says.
“That bites.” “sucked”.
Death, Violence and Gore – Working at a clinic can be gory at times.  There’s a dog that has been hit by a car and a mummified baby kitten.  An animal has a badly cut paw.  Uncle Sanjay tells of when he saw a cow with an eyeball hanging from a socket.  An older animal must be put to sleep.   All of these issues are handled in a respectful way, with emphasis on the life cycle.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – None.
Frightening or Intense Things – None.

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The Not-So-Star-Spangled Life of Sunita Sen

The Not-So-Star-Spangled Life of Sunita Sen (Originally published as: The Sunita Experiment) by Mitali Perkins

Sunita is managing just fine living the stressful life of a tween.  She’s got a best friend who needs beauty tips, a feminist older sister at Berkley who berates her for shaving and a best friend named Michael who just might someday be more than just a friend.  But when her grandparents arrive from India, Sunita is ready to melt with embarrassment.  Her mother has set aside her western clothes in favor of sarees, has started wearing a bindi but worst of all, has asked her not to have Michael over anymore, because her grandparents just wouldn’t understand.

Sunni’s shame over who she is makes her act in some pretty unattractive ways.  She doesn’t tell Michael the truth about why she can’t see him anymore.  She reaches out to another girl in friendship, but immediately after extending an invitation to hang out, she ditches the girl just because she hears someone whisper about “the colored girls stick together.”  When her best friend is going on a sort-of date, Sunni gives her the cold shoulder. It’s ugly behavior, but it’s also the kind of thing middle school girls do.  In the end, through the love and patience of everyone around her, Sunni learns that it’s okay to be Indian and American, not just one or the other.

Great for: Showing family togetherness despite friction.  It’s also great for children who are trying to figure out how to reconcile their cultural identity.

Sex, Nudity, Dating – Sunita likes a boy. Dadu watches soap operas, but abandons most of them because people remove their clothes. In class students discuss marriage traditions and customs of other countries. Classmates exclaim that it’s gross to sleep with someone you don’t know. Liz’s sister Tracy and her friends make out with boys at a party.
Profanity– Sunni calls herself names: moron, idiot, fool, jerk.
Death, Violence and Gore – None.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – Liz’s sister Tracy serves beer to other teens at a party. The younger girls do not drink however.
Frightening or Intense Things – None.

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Younguncle Comes to Town

Younguncle Comes to Town by Vandana Singh

I grabbed this off the shelf because of the cheerful illustrations and the slightly larger than usual font believing it would fall into that most elusive category, the early chapter book.  Had I read the book jacket I would have certainly realized my mistake.  Singh has a PhD in theoretical particle physics.  I don’t know that this necessarily means she can’t write a simple children’s book, but it certainly explains her dropping in serious vocabulary words like mendicant, philosophical, regurgitating, consternation, cacophony and enigmatic, not to mention the reference to a dyspeptic water buffalo.

The book is a series of only vaguely related stories about Younguncle. Younguncle has arrived at the home of his nieces and nephew and regales them with stories about his past, all while trying to keep his shirt.  The baby it seems has a life-long ambition to eat a shirt of Younguncle’s.  Side note: I love the baby.  The baby is one of the best characters.  The book is quite funny in places, but I worry that younger children won’t understand the book well enough to get the humor.  They will certainly appreciate the crazy monkeys however and the tiger that prefers to eat spinach paneer. For the children who can understand the vocabulary, they will not require too much background knowledge of India for the story.  Most vocabulary that is specific to India refers to either trees or food which makes it pretty easy to read around it.

Sex, Nudity, Dating –Younguncle does not want a wife although others think he should marry and settle down.  Younguncle’s sister is engaged to a man who is not nice, one of the stories revolves around freeing her from this engagement.
Profanity– None.
Death, Violence and Gore – A man tries to hit a monkey with a pole.  A bad man and his clan use a wildlife sanctuary as their private hunting grounds. A girl is kept from escaping by an iron ring around her foot (she is rescued!)  She says she would rather die than do what the bad men want her to do.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – None.
Frightening or Intense Things – There is a very active ghost in one of the stories.  It’s not very scary but it is still a ghost.

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Monsoon Afternoon

Monsoon Afternoon by Kashmira Sheth

A perfect pairing with My Dadima Wears a Sari, Monsoon Afternoon tells of a little boy spending time with his grandfather.  When the rain comes, the little boy longs for someone to go outside with him.  Although most of his family is too busy, his grandfather gladly goes into the rain.  They share games and the grandfather reminisces about the monsoon season when he was a boy.  Again, Sheth emphasizes family and tradtion and Yoshiko Jaeggi’s illustrations bring the story to life.

Sex, Nudity, Dating –Dadima wears a sari which exposes her midriff.
Profanity– None.
Death, Violence and Gore – None.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – None.
Frightening or Intense Things – None.

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