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Ganesha: The Wonder Years (Campfire Graphic Novels)

Ganesha: The Wonder Years (Campfire Graphic Novels)

Current price: $10.99
Publication Date: September 15th, 2015
Publisher:
Campfire Junior
ISBN:
9789381182109
Pages:
44

Description

Campfire Junior brings you the adventures of Ganesha, the mischievous elephant god and his amazing friends. Early adventures of Ganesha's childhood are delightfully brought to life in the first book of a new series of legends for younger readers.

About the Author

Sourav Dutta has been a veteran in the publishing and media industries and a former art critic. He has enjoyed graphic novels from a young age due to his love for both art and the written word. He is also a 3D computer graphics hobbyist and spends endless waking hours designing post-apocalyptic worlds and hideous monsters for 3D art and animation. He has previously written Magical Animals: The Frog Prince for Campfire. 

Lines and colours have been a part of Rajesh Nagulakonda's life right from his childhood in Chirala, Andhra Pradesh. His grandfather was a goldsmith and his father a printer. Both of them influenced him to take up art as a career. Rajesh believes in instinct rather than education. He mostly spends his time alone trying to explore different forms of art, such as sculpture, nail-art on paper, metal engraving, and of course, painting. Rajesh lives in Delhi with his wife and two daughters and with dreams of becoming a versatile artist. Some of his Campfire titles are Magical Animals, Krishna, The Little Alien and Pride and Prejudice.

Praise for Ganesha: The Wonder Years (Campfire Graphic Novels)

“Told in hilarious rhyming couplets and illustrated playfully, this brief graphic novel ably introduces kids to the wise, exuberant child Ganesha. . . Dutta and Nagulakonda leave readers happy and wanting more—which is on the way, if the last line, "Not the End," is to be trusted. Whether newbies to Indian mythology or longtime Amar Chitra Katha aficionados, readers are sure to be entertained by these fresh interpretations of ancient Indian tales.” — Kirkus Reviews