Book Descriptions
for The Flute by Rachna Gilmore
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
Chandra is a much-loved child named for the moon. In a year when the monsoon rains flood her village, her parents are carried away in the waters. Her aunt and uncle take her in, but the love and warmth are gone from her life. Her only comfort is her mother’s wooden flute but her aunt and uncle tire of hearing it and toss it into the river. Not long after, Chandra is tending the cows and hears the flute. “It sang of hope and plenty.” Food appears, and for the first time since her parents’ death Chandra isn’t hungry. When her aunt and uncle find out she’s not sharing the magic food, she is cast out in the midst of another flood. But the flute sounds again, leading her into the arms of a loving couple who lost their son the year before and ask her to be their daughter. Rachna Gilmore’s original tale includes love, tragedy, cruelty, and a beautifully happy ending. The broad strokes of plot and character match the folkloric feel of this satisfying story. (Ages 4–8)
CCBC Choices 2013. © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2013. Used with permission.
From the Publisher
In this beautiful picturebook written by Governor General's Award-winning author Rachna Gilmore and illustrated by India's most renowned illustrator, Pulak Biswas, a little girl nearly drowns when a swollen river overflows its banks. Tragically, her beloved mother and father are swept away in the flood. Raised by a cruel and uncaring aunt and uncle, the little girl finds solace in her mother's magic flute. The Flute is an enchanting tale of the power of hope and the resilience of the human spirit.
Publisher description retrieved from Google Books.