What is the most important thing a person can leave behind?
In Aatha and Appachi, Valli Saran - chess coach, FIDE Arbiter, and National Instructor - answers that question through twenty intimate chapters about the grandparents who raised her. Not with declarations or disciplines, but through the lived details of two extraordinary ordinary lives: early morning coffee rituals, railway platform conversations, home-cooked meals, small corrections given with perfect timing, and a love so habituated it had long since stopped needing to prove itself.
Part memoir, part meditation on what it truly means to raise a child, Aatha and Appachi follows Valli from her childhood home in India through marriage, migration, grief, and professional life abroad - and shows how the lessons absorbed in that first house never stopped travelling with her. When Aatha passed away and Valli stood in a foreign kitchen feeling entirely unprepared, she reached for patience she didn't know she had. It had been placed there, quietly, years before.
Warm, precise, and deeply humane, this book is for anyone who has been shaped by someone who shaped them without trying to. For grandchildren who grew up too fast. For parents wondering if they are doing enough. For anyone who misses a particular person and cannot quite explain why the missing feels so foundational.
The ordinary days were never ordinary. This book remembers them as they deserve to be remembered.