A Leaf Out Of Someone Else’s Book

Friday, 11 April 2008, 13:53

| Category : Citywatch, Mumbai metblogs, Roving I, X-post
| Tags : , ,


No Gravatar

I stopped by this pavement stall last evening. It has been…oh, so very long..since I visited this place. Getting to be a real book-snob, are we, patronizing only the big bookstores? Yet, the bookseller recognized me in trice and his eyes bore no rebuke.

bookstall.jpg

There’s one at every corner, if you know where to look and I’ve given away a few of my secrets before. This is (or used to be) one of my favorite haunts before convenience and credit cards took over.

From the evergreen Sidney Sheldons, John Grishams and Jeffrey Archers to the ubiquitous management books, this place still holds its charm. It’s hard to supress that innate sense of superiority in pulling out a book and placing it in the ‘right’ stack along with others in the genre. So pop fiction to the sides, classics in the middle, bestsellers on top. Then realisation strikes that the dynamics of cataloguing work differently in a street-stall.

There’s a certain order in the chaos, one that creates itself. You’ll always find Diary of Anne Frank, Roget’s Pocket Thesaurus (I don’t know anyone with pockets large enough to fit this volume!!) and Chicken Soup for the Soul atop one of the heaps. These are books that most browsers instinctively pull out and several dump aside as well. The largest stash in any raddiwalla’s store will be the Mills n’ Boons and its twins – who says the city is devoid of romantics?  :-)

Popularity determines the order, not genre or author. It has its own appeal. After all, if you’re like me, you’ll know the best way to read is not to go slam-dunk into any particular author’s works or even to stick to one genre. The most satisfying way is to vary them, never repeating any aspect in consecutive books. That way, the contrasts bring out the speciality of each book and make the experience so much richer!

Ever so often I’ve found that all I have to do is grab an armful of books from anywhere in the stack and I’ll have my next three books in the exact order that I would like to read them. The random shuffling has already been done!

I finally picked up There’s no such place as far away. Long are the days that I was an avid Richard Bach enthusiast. While those days are past and this isn’t even one of his best, I still remain a collector and so the slim pastel-covered book will occupy a place of pride with my other black-and-blue-and-silver volumes.

I always like to open the first page of a book. A new book has a sense of anticipation and…emptiness; like a new house waiting for you to furnish and populate it with your thoughts and being. A second-hand book on the other hand, is like being welcomed into someone else’s house.

On the inner cover were scribbled in a vivid flourish,

Dear Chandru,

I’m sending you my copy. I don’t know how much sense it might make to you but it’ll be good reading anyway (wot!!) It’s something I feel..and believe in. Enjoy maadi!

Maya

Was I sneaking a peek into a private conversation*? Yes I was…but I had bought it after all. My guilt assuaged, the voyeur in me smiled. It sounded exactly like something I would have written and just the same book I would have gifted a friend.

There is nothing quite like the feel and smell of an old book. Even if it is second-hand. Perhaps, especially so.

There’s no such place as far away

* If either Maya or Chandru are reading this post, I feel like I should apologize for not asking your permission first before sharing this note. But it touched a chord somewhere, really.

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed!Share This Post
Digg This
Reddit This
Stumble Now!
Buzz This
Vote on DZone
Share on Facebook
Bookmark this on Delicious
Kick It on DotNetKicks.com
Shout it
Share on LinkedIn
Bookmark this on Technorati
Post on Twitter
Google Buzz (aka. Google Reader)

21 idea-filings for “A Leaf Out Of Someone Else’s Book”

  1. 1arZanNo Gravatar

    where is this treasure trove. what will it take to divulge the secret :)

    arZan’s last blog post..The Tank Man: View from Within

  2. 2rossoneriNo Gravatar

    Haven’t read a Bach in 6 years…but it still brings back the same thoughts!

    rossoneri’s last blog post..All Hail Becks!

  3. 3'nonnymousNo Gravatar

    Old books have a distinct thrill to them… expecially the ones that have been written on.

    ‘nonnymous’s last blog post..Brain rot.. Personality rot.

  4. 4AdithyaNo Gravatar

    Is this the place opposite hutatma chowk? That place was heaven.
    Is it still there??

    Adithya’s last blog post..Crushes!

  5. 5'nonnymousNo Gravatar

    Old books have a definite thrill to them… especially the ones that have been scribbled on

    ‘nonnymous’s last blog post..Brain rot.. Personality rot.

  6. 6PragniNo Gravatar

    actually scrolled down to comments to see if Chandu or Maya did visit your blog and leave a comment!! :)

    Pragni’s last blog post..My shot at soulmates…

  7. 7AshishNo Gravatar

    Love the smell of Old books!!

  8. 8ramblerNo Gravatar

    I want to read that book..Is this a prequel to bridge across forever?

    rambler’s last blog post..Days ahead

  9. 9IdeaSmithNo Gravatar

    @ arZan: A good long conversation unhindered by busy schedules! :mrgreen: But seriously? When you’re in Mumbai next, I’d be proud to take you around to all these places I love.

    @ rossoneri: Bach is like an old friend with whom it’s always a delight to pick up a conversation thread again.

    @ ‘nonnymous: Exactly.

    @ Adithya: Nope, this is another place. I think you’re thinking of Flora Fountain? That collection has been on the decline since the BMC’s street cleanup drive and afterwards when the suburbs started sprouting their own stores and pavement stalls.

    @ Pragni: It was a far shot I guess.

    @ Ashish: :-) Not the ones with termites in them though, I expect?

    @ rambler: No, this says he is married to Leslie Parrish so it comes after. One of the several books written in that love-haze that followed their marriage I expect. You did know that they got divorced later?

  10. 10Cynic in WonderlandNo Gravatar

    new template again? takes a long time to load tho.

    do u ever go to fort and just walk down the roads and feel happy at the number of books there?

    Cynic in Wonderland’s last blog post..Summer Holidays

  11. 11BannoNo Gravatar

    Lovely post! Second-hand books and Richard Bach. Made me feel very nostalgic.

    Banno’s last blog post..Their very own room

  12. 124wDNo Gravatar

    I like old books for their cheap reading… but i really appreciate new books more. Its almost like books absorb a bit of their owner … and one that’s only yours has a bit of you in it.
    They’re like motorcyles, in that way :)
    -4

    4wD’s last blog post..How to snag literary type chicks.

  13. 13IdeaSmithNo Gravatar

    @ Cynic: Here, the old one’s back! No, I don’t go to Fort that much now. Besides being too far, having other options in the suburbs…the Fort footpath is becoming more a pirated movie/software arcade than a book-bazaar.

    @ Banno: Lovely feeling, isn’t it? :razz:

    @ 4wd: That’s true. But I like both sensations for different reasons and feel very lucky that I can now afford to pick what and when I want to experience.

  14. 14SenseNo Gravatar

    :mrgreen: Jusat wanted to gloat – Got a Tom Hold And a Pratchett for 10 p each!

    Sense’s last blog post..A Blogger’s Guide to the Real World

  15. 15SenseNo Gravatar

    :oops: Oh crap! wheres Spell Check when you need one? Tom Holt, and Just, I mean.

    Sense’s last blog post..A Blogger’s Guide to the Real World

  16. 16IdeaSmithNo Gravatar

    @ NONSense: Khee khee khee… :mrgreen: :twisted:

  17. 17individuelNo Gravatar

    Andheri West?

  18. 18IdeaSmithNo Gravatar

    @ individuel: ;-)

  19. 19Ms TaggartNo Gravatar

    Hmm.. that note really did strike a chord with me too.. reminded me of days when I would write notes on books and gift to people.. :)

    Ms Taggarts last idea: Amnesia!

  20. 20IdeaSmithNo Gravatar

    @ Ms Taggart: Books…and the people we buy them for, are always special.

Trackbacks

  1. 1. A Landmark Love Story | Mumbai Metblogs

Leave a comment