Review:
"With a light touch and refreshing candor, Grennan in Little Princes tells the story of how a good-looking University of Virginia grad with wanderlust ended up risking his life to find, then reunite, children with their families in Nepal, one of the poorest countries in the world."--USA Today
"While the story is amazing, sincere and touching, it is also a pleasure to see how the author grows, both in personality and style over the five years that the memoir covers."--Seattle Post-Intelligencer
"The author stumbles into volunteering in an orphanage in Nepal and gets involved in reuniting trafficked children with their families. The energy of these children will make you laugh even though they've been through hardship and loss."--San Francisco Chronicle Book Review
"'Little Princes' is a tale of determination, courage and love that will not leave you unchanged."--Daytona Beach News
"Funny, touching, tragic. Conor Grennan's "Little Princes" is a remarkable tale of corruption, child trafficking and civil war in a far away land -- and one man's extraordinary quest to reunite lost Nepalese children with their parents."--Neil White, author of "In the Sanctuary of Outcasts"
"The beauty of this book is partly the fact that it is a memoir. But it is also more than that. I defy you to not be inspired or moved by this saga."--New York Journal of Books
In the tradition of "Three Cups of Tea" and "Mountains Beyond Mountains," this book provides proof (there cannot be too much) of the value of volunteer work.--Los Angeles Times
In the tradition of Three Cups of Tea and Mountains Beyond Mountains, this book provides proof (there cannot be too much) of the value of volunteer work.--Los Angeles Times"
With a light touch and refreshing candor, Grennan in Little Princes tells the story of how a good-looking University of Virginia grad with wanderlust ended up risking his life to find, then reunite, children with their families in Nepal, one of the poorest countries in the world. --USA Today"
The beauty of this book is partly the fact that it is a memoir. But it is also more than that. I defy you to not be inspired or moved by this saga. --New York Journal of Books"
The author stumbles into volunteering in an orphanage in Nepal and gets involved in reuniting trafficked children with their families. The energy of these children will make you laugh even though they ve been through hardship and loss. --San Francisco Chronicle Book Review"
While the story is amazing, sincere and touching, it is also a pleasure to see how the author grows, both in personality and style over the five years that the memoir covers. --Seattle Post-Intelligencer"
Grennan s work is by turns self-pokingly humorous, exciting, and inspiring. --Publishers Weekly (starred review)"
Little Princes is a tale of determination, courage and love that will not leave you unchanged. --Daytona Beach News"
Funny, touching, tragic. Conor Grennan s "Little Princes" is a remarkable tale of corruption, child trafficking and civil war in a far away land and one man s extraordinary quest to reunite lost Nepalese children with their parents. --Neil White, author of "In the Sanctuary of Outcasts""
"Funny, touching, tragic. Conor Grennan's Little Princes is a remarkable tale of corruption, child trafficking and civil war in a far away land -- and one man's extraordinary quest to reunite lost Nepalese children with their parents."--Neil White, author of In the Sanctuary of Outcasts
In the tradition of -Three Cups of Tea- and -Mountains Beyond Mountains,- this book provides proof (there cannot be too much) of the value of volunteer work.--Los Angeles Times
-With a light touch and refreshing candor, Grennan in Little Princes tells the story of how a good-looking University of Virginia grad with wanderlust ended up risking his life to find, then reunite, children with their families in Nepal, one of the poorest countries in the world.---USA Today
-The beauty of this book is partly the fact that it is a memoir. But it is also more than that. I defy you to not be inspired or moved by this saga.---New York Journal of Books
-The author stumbles into volunteering in an orphanage in Nepal and gets involved in reuniting trafficked children with their families. The energy of these children will make you laugh even though they've been through hardship and loss.---San Francisco Chronicle Book Review
-While the story is amazing, sincere and touching, it is also a pleasure to see how the author grows, both in personality and style over the five years that the memoir covers.---Seattle Post-Intelligencer
-Grennan's work is by turns self-pokingly humorous, exciting, and inspiring.---Publishers Weekly (starred review)
-'Little Princes' is a tale of determination, courage and love that will not leave you unchanged.---Daytona Beach News
-Funny, touching, tragic. Conor Grennan's Little Princes is a remarkable tale of corruption, child trafficking and civil war in a far away land -- and one man's extraordinary quest to reunite lost Nepalese children with their parents.---Neil White, author of In the Sanctuary of Outcasts
"Grennan's work is by turns self-pokingly humorous, exciting, and inspiring."--Publishers Weekly (starred review)
From the Publisher:
An Amazon Exclusive Essay by Conor Grennan.
Then, when the children would go to bed at 8 p.m., I would bundle up in two or three fleeces, a hat, and woolen gloves I had cut the fingers out of; I'd pull out my notebook and I'd sit down to write my travel blog, copying everything I had put into the notebook over the course of the day into an old, ultra-light Dell I'd bought off eBay for about 200 dollars. It was pretty much useless except as a word processor, but it was the most precious thing I owned. Over the next three years, traveling the globe and living in Nepal, I would end up typing just over half-a-million words on that little workhorse--five times the length of Little Princes.
It turned out that writing everything down in the moment was critical because the more time I spent in Nepal, the more normal these "strange" things became. It became normal to watch my blankets being made from scratch on the ground outside my house, to trade broken flip-flops for potatoes, and to use outhouses on a daily basis without thinking twice about it. (Did you hear that, people? Outhouses!)
The funny thing is, with all that note-taking, I never had any intention of writing a book about my time in Nepal. It honestly never occurred to me that it was a much of a story until someone else mentioned the idea to me.
Once I started writing the book, however, I couldn't stop. I went back to my old notebooks and I was suddenly in Nepal again, hearing in my mind exactly how Hriteek had laughed, or Nishal had protested, or Raju had squealed as he'd run through the house, bare feet padding against the cold cement floors.
Little Princes, the book, allowed me to revisit that wonderful, difficult, challenging, happy time of my life. I still get back to Nepal, of course, and I still see the children. But they change, they grow up. Writing Little Princes allowed me to visit the children as they were. And also, as the person I was.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.