For most reverent outsiders, the epithet &lsquocity of grey hairs and green hedges&rsquo for one of their favourite holiday destinations, Dehradun, never gets old. But there are reasons other than the city being a retirement haven for this time-tested love and fidelity. Over the last several decades, legends, myths and folklore spun around the city have seeped into the imagination of hill-bound travellers, thereby maintaining a perennial tourist blitz in the valley. The richness and nostalgia are captured in personal experiences, stories and vignettes &ndash the old-style education, delectable caramel stick jaws and the oft-told and written about &lsquoDoon boyhood&rsquo accounts that it has inspired, to name a few. And then there is the ubiquitous narrative about life in the valley by Ruskin Bond, whose Night Train at Deoli and Other Stories and The Room on the Roof, which has, along with other literature, painted a Blyton-esque picture of enchantment and magical adventures in this part of the world for decades.

