Chandoba Book Apr 2026

In the heart of Pune’s oldest peth , amidst the chaotic symphony of rickshaw bells and spice-seller’s cries, lived a ten-year-old boy named Aarav. To his friends, Aarav was a walking encyclopedia of gadgets; to his teachers, a frustratingly clever student who never read the textbook. Aarav hated reading. He found books slow, silent, and dead.

And gasped.

They found the flute inside the mouth of a sleeping, giant clam. But the clam would only open if someone told it a story it had never heard before. Rani, who only knew the story of the moon, wept in despair. chandoba book

Years later, when Aarav had his own children, he would bring out the faded red book. And on a quiet, rainy evening, he would place it in their reluctant, screen-slicked hands. In the heart of Pune’s oldest peth ,

From that night on, Aarav became a different kind of reader. He didn’t just scan words. He dove into them. He finished the Chandoba book in a month, but he didn’t just finish it—he lived it. He sailed with shipwrecked pirates, argued with a talking banyan tree, and learned the recipe for starlight jam. He found books slow, silent, and dead