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The Climate Plot Thickens

The New Indian Express Kollam

|

October 19, 2025

From stories about cloud monsters to reimagined fairytales, environmental literature is emerging as a growing trend in children's publishing

- By MOHD SHEHWAAZ KHAN

The Climate Plot Thickens

In today's Indian children's books, the planet isn't just background scenery-it's the heartbeat of the story.

A girl named Savi learns from an ancient tree that her climate-perfect city, Shajarpur, is slipping into danger, and only she can save it. In Mumbai, young Zara rolls up her sleeves to turn a forgotten dump yard on Sunderbaag Street into a garden. And in a haunting reimagining of a fairytale, No White wanders a world where the snow has vanished and the seven friends work in a mine.

These are not the moral lectures, but plotlines in children's books that swap sermons for action, and guilt for grit. Rooted in the heat, dust, and monsoons of children's neighbourhoods, they spark imagination while grounding young readers in the reality of their changing world. The message is clear: the climate crisis isn't somewhere else, sometime later. It's here, and the heroes who can change it are already on the page.

The spark was lit in 2019 when Bijal Vachharajani's A Cloud Called Bhura hit the shelves. The eco-fantasy about a smog monster taking over Mumbai quickly became a bestseller, proving there was both appetite and urgency for such narratives.

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