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'Elephant In The Womb': Kalki Koechlin turns author with 'candid, funny, and relatable' book on motherhood

The soon-to-be-published book by actress Kalki Koechlin will discuss the unspoken aspects of motherhood - the highs and the lows.

  • Actress Kalki Koechlin will be making her debut as an author with an illustrated non-fiction book on motherhood
  • The book 'Elephant In The Womb' will discuss pregnancy and parenting for mothers
  • It includes a combination of personal essays and think-pieces by Kalki

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'Elephant In The Womb': Kalki Koechlin turns author with 'candid, funny, and relatable' book on motherhood Instagram: Kalki Koechlin

New Delhi: Actor Kalki Koechlin is making her debut as an author with an illustrated non-fiction book on motherhood, publisher Penguin Random House India (PRHI) announced on Saturday.

Titled "Elephant In The Womb", the book illustrated by Valeriya Polyanychko, will be published under 'Penguin's' imprint this year.

A combination of personal essays and think-pieces, the graphic book is a "candid, funny and relatable" account talking about pregnancy and parenting for mothers, expectant mothers, and "anyone even thinking about motherhood".

"While I was struggling with my pregnancy and my new role as a mother, it was my friends who helped me. They shared their rough times and dark phases and how they got through it with laughter and contemplation, and that helped me more than those who spoke only of the glorious, blessed babe in arms that brought light into their lives," said the 37-year-old actor, who gave birth to a baby girl in February last year.

According to the publisher, Koechlin's nuanced prose makes the readers aware of the physiological discomfort and manic expectations that make motherhood a bittersweet experience.

"Kalki Koechlin's book deals with the mother of all issues, the fact that parenting is as exhausting as it is fulfilling, as draining as it is inspiring, and as frustrating as it is joyous.

"We romanticize motherhood in popular culture, and I'm so glad Kalki has pulled back the curtain on what is essentially the physical and emotional labour of much of the female population," said Maasi Subramaniam, executive editor at PRHI.