Thursday, 13 February 2014

ruskin bond

Ruskin Bond (born 19 May 1934) is an Indian author of British descent.
The Indian Council for Child Education recognised his pioneering role in the growth of children's literature in India, and awarded him the Sahitya Akademi Award in 1992 for Our Trees Still Grow in Dehra, given by the Sahitya Akademi, India's National Academy of Literature. He was awarded thePadma Shri in 1999 and Padma Bhushan in 2014. He now lives with his adopted family in Landour, near Mussoorie.

==Life and career==
Ruskin Bond was born on 19 May 1934 in a military hospital in [[Kasauli]], to Edith Clerke and Aubrey Bond. His siblings were Ellen and William. Ruskin's father was with the Royal Air Force. When Bond was four years old, his mother separated from his father and married a Punjabi-Hindu, Mr. Hari, who himself had been married once.

Bond spent his early childhood in Jamnagar and Shimla. At the age of ten Ruskin went to live at his grandmother's house in [[Dehradun]] after his father's sudden death in 1944 from malaria. Ruskin was raised by his mother. He completed his schooling at [[Bishop Cotton School (Shimla)|Bishop Cotton School]] in Shimla, from where he graduated in 1952 after winning several writing competitions in the school like the Irwin Divinity Prize and the Hailey Literature Prize.

Following his high school education he went to his aunt's house in England and stayed there for four years. In London he started writing his first novel, ''[[The Room on the Roof]]'', the semi-autobiographical story of the orphaned Anglo-Indian boy Rusty. It won the 1957 [[John Llewellyn Rhys prize]], awarded to a British Commonwealth writer under 30. Bond used the advance money from the book to pay the sea passage to [[Bombay]]. He worked for some years as a journalist in [[Delhi]] and [[Dehradun]]. Since 1963 he has lived as a freelance writer in [[Mussoorie]], a town in the Himalayan foothills.<ref name="allindia">{{cite web | url=http://www.allindianewssite.com/7396/the-name-is-bond-ruskin-bond | title=The name is Bond, Ruskin Bond | accessdate=3 March 2011 | author=Sinha, Arpita | date=18 May 2010}}</ref> He wrote ''Vagrants in the Valley'', as a sequel to ''The Room on the Roof''. These two novels were published in one volume by Penguin India in 1993. The following year a collection of his non-fiction writings, ''The Best Of Ruskin Bond'' was published by Penguin India. His interest in the paranormal led him to write popular titles such as ''Ghost Stories from the Raj'', ''A Season of Ghosts'', and ''A Face in the Dark and other Hauntings''.

Media-shy, he currently lives in Landour, Mussoorie's Ivy Cottage, which has been his home since 1964.

Collection:



  • Garland of Memories
  • Ghost Stories from the Raj
  • Funny Side Up
  • Rain in the Mountains-Notes from the Himalayas
  • Our trees still grow in Dehra
  • Dust on the Mountain
  • A Season of Ghosts
  • Tigers Forever
  • A Town Called Dehra
  • An Island of Trees
  • The Night Train at Deoli
  • A Face in the Dark and Other Hauntings
  • Potpourri
  • The Adventures of Rusty
  • The Lost Ruby
  • Crazy times with Uncle Ken
  • The Death Of Trees
  • Tales and Legends from India
  • Time stops at Shamli
  • Grandpa tickles a tiger
  • Four Feathers
  • School Days
  • The Tiger In The tunnel
  • The Parrot Who Wouldn't Talk
  • The Doctor
  • Hip Hop Nature Boy and Other Poems

Novels

Tuesday, 11 February 2014

sachin tendulkar

Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar( born 24 April 1973) is an former Indian cricketer widely acknowledged as the greatest batsman of the modern generation, popularly holds the title "God of Cricket" among his fans. He is also acknowledged as the greatest cricketer of all time. He took up cricket at the age of eleven, made his Test debut against Pakistan at the age of sixteen, and went on to represent Mumbai domestically and India internationally for close to twenty-four years. He is the only player to have scored one hundred international centuries, the first batsman to score a Double Century in a One Day International, and the only player to complete more than 30,000 runs in international cricket..In October 2013, he became the 16th player and first Indian to aggregate 50,000 runs in all recognised cricket (First-classList A and Twenty20 combined
Tendulkar received the Arjuna Award in 1994 for outstanding sporting achievement, the Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna award in 1997, India's highest sporting honour, and the Padma Shri and Padma Vibhushan awards in 1999 and 2008, respectively, India's fourth and second highest civilian awards. After a few hours of his final match on 16 November 2013, the Prime Minister's Office announced the decision to award Bharat Ratna, India's highest civilian award. With the scientist C. N. R. Rao, he was conferred the award on 4 February 2014 by President Pranab Mukherjee in a special ceremony in the Durbar Hall of the Rashtrapati Bhavan. He is the youngest recipient to date and the first ever sportsperson to receive the award. He also won the 2010 Sir Garfield Sobers Trophy for cricketer of the year at the ICC awards. In 2012, Tendulkar was nominated to Rajya Sabha, the upper house of the Parliament of India.He was also the first sportsperson (and the first without an aviation background) to be awarded the honorary rank of Group Captain by the Indian Air Force. In 2012, he was named an Honorary Member of the Order of Australia

Following poor performance in the 2012 series against England, Tendulkar announced his retirement from One Day Internationals on 23 December 2012, while noting that he will be available for Test cricket In response to the news, former India captain Sourav Ganguly noted that Tendulkar could have played the up-coming series against Pakistan, while Anil Kumble said it would be "tough to see an Indian (ODI) team list without Tendulkar's name in it", and Javagal Srinath mentioned that Tendulkar "changed the way ODIs were played right from the time he opened in New Zealand in 1994".After playing his lone Twenty20 International in 2006 against South Africa, he stated that he would not play T20 Internationals any more.He announced his retirement from IPL after his team Mumbai Indians beat Chennai Super Kings by 23 runs at the Eden Gardens in Kolkata on 26 May to win the Pepsi Indian Premier League 2013 He retired from Twenty20 cricket and limited-overs cricket, after playing the 2013 Champions League Twenty20 in Sept–Oct 2013 in India for Mumbai Indians.
On 10 October 2013 Tendulkar announced that he would retire from all cricket after the two-Test series against West Indies in November. Later the BCCI confirmed that the two matches will be played at Kolkata and Mumbai, making the farewell happen at his home ground on Tendulkar's request. He scored 74 runs in his last test innings against West Indies, thus failing short by 79 runs to complete 16,000 runs in test cricket.The Cricket Association of Bengal and the Mumbai Cricket Association organised events to mark his retirement from the sport. Various national and international figures from cricket, politics, Bollywood and other fields spoke about him in a day-long Salaam Sachin Conclave organised by India Today