Bulbul Sharma is an Indian painter and writer currently based in New Delhi. At present, she is working on a collection of short stories for neo-literate children.
Biography
Sharma was born in New Delhi and spent most of her childhood days in the steel town of Bhilai, Madhya Pradesh. Sharma finished her graduation in Russian Language and Literature from Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi in 1972. Thereafter she went to Moscow State University for higher education. Upon her return to India in 1973, she pursued a career in painting. She joined Gawri, an artist complex in New Delhi. It was only in 1985 that she took to writing full-time. She held several exhibitions of her paintings in India and abroad and her paintings are in the collection of National Gallery of Modern Art, Lalit Kala Akademi, Chandigarh Museum., UNICEF NORAD, National Institute of Health, Washington, The Nehru Centre, London. She started writing weekly columns in Statesman and editing children's books for various publishers. Her stories have been translated into French, Italian, German and Finnish. Her other passions include bird-watching and teaching art to disabled children. "Learn everything you can, anytime you can, from anyone you can, there will always come a time when you will be grateful you did", quoted Sharma at a school in Gurgaon which is also a philosophy she lives by. Her writing style is simple and based on her observations, and the places she travels. Pointing out the beauty in ordinary things, she makes her books vivid. She goes into the cycle of seasons and the changes it brings.
Books
Sharma has conducted art and story telling workshops for special children for over the last 15 years. She started with collections of short stories and then progressed towards novels and books for children Short Stories
My Sainted Aunts
The Perfect Woman
Anger of Aubergines
Novels
Banana-Flower Dreams
Shaya Tales
Eating Women Telling Tales – In this book, Sharma explores the many roles—some perennial, some unexpected—that food can play in women’s lives.