Author:
Elsiddiq Babiker Mohammad, Dr. Isam Addin Mohammed Alhassan Ismaeel
Abstract:
This paper studies the works of Ruskin Bond. Many critics say he is only a children's writer. But his stories show deeper psychological and cultural meaning. They talk about identity, belonging, and social life. They also express the reader's emotion and memory. This article uses different research approaches. It combines thematic, linguistic, reader response, gender, and postcolonial views. The purpose is to create a unified critical understanding. Bond creates a literary world of nature and memory. Everyday relationship helps characters find emotional security. His stories reflect postcolonial experience in a quiet way. His plots are simple and not dramatic. He depends on feeling and familiarity. Meaning develops through reader participation and spatial experience. Nature, memory, and human connection together form identity and emotional belonging in his fiction.
Keywords:
Identity, Belonging, Relations, Emotion, Society
Article Info:
Received: 25 Jan 2026; Received in revised form: 22 Feb 2026; Accepted: 27 Feb 2026; Available online: 05 Mar 2026
DOI:
10.22161/ijels.112.3