Though a sheer
coincidence, the kindly gesture of a few SFVians to throw open their
collection of books for takeaway or to borrow, could not have come at a more
opportune time than in the Lockdown days.
So,
when Sana Khan household shared their collection for takeaway, I thought I
would try O Henry’s short stories. But I wanted the younger generation to have
the first choice. Thus I thought of writing to the donor that in the event it was
not picked up in a week, I would drop in. But that was not to be.
It
was then Ravi’s (3121) turn to share his collection. Aunty had read most of John
Grisham and Robin Cook, but I spotted some that maybe she had not read. And
Jeffrey Archer is the favourite of both. Also, I was keen to read Paulo Coelho
(The Alchemist famous).
Prior
to these two announcements I was to contact Shanthy Vaidya to borrow
“Charlotte’s Web” from her collection. My eldest grandson (now ready to join
College) had narrated the story to me when he was 8. Yes, in a reversal of the
universal practice, he told me this as a bedtime story in three instalments - me
in bed and he sitting by my side. Initially I thought I was doing him a favour
by listening, but not after day one. He could keep the listener hang on his
lips to hear more. I still recall the friendship of Charlotte, the barn spider,
with Wilbur the pig, how the pig was in danger of being slaughtered by its farmer
owner, and how Charlottee wrote messages
on its web praising Wilbur, hopefully to persuade the farmer to give up the
idea…
Anyway,
back to SFV, I asked Aunty if I could grab some of these books. “By all means,”
she reassured me from the kitchen, “but not before you complete the top row of
books in our own shelf that eagerly await human contact.” That was hitting me below
the belt. Yes, our shelf has two rows. The bottom one is replete with religious
books. The top row stands elegantly classified: “we shall do justice to these
purchases one day.”
Luckily
the purchase didn’t cost us a fortune. We picked these from a Library book sale
in the US. Most of the cover pages carried the marketing inscription, “By the
best selling author of…”, or “New York Times Best seller.” The latter inscription just meant
that during that particular week, fortnight or month, the book registered the highest
sale - nothing more, nothing less.
“Why do you want to buy them when you can
borrow them from Library, and return later?” asked my unsuspecting son. “No,
no, I want to take these to India,” I asserted. “These second hand books?” he
re-enquired to make sure.
“Look
Shankar, anything that I have not read is first-hand,” I said in defence. He
murmured something. Must have said, “Incorrigible”.
Undaunted,
he made one final attempt, “Appa, you mean you will carry all these at the cost of
something else Amma may wish to stuff the suitcase with, say, almonds, raisins,
walnut?” he persisted. “For Heaven’s sake, Shankar, don’t give ideas to your
Mom for a tug of war on a new turf.”
As
I was trying to hammer out these lines, a flyer lands from my friend, Dr Panduranga
Bhatta, of Oak 1151. He has just published two more books: “The Art of Leading
in a Borderless World” in 338 pages, and “Introduction to Sanskrit Poetics”. I wish I were able to write at least a para, let alone a page, on these topics. Anyway, that
adds two more feathers to his already crowded cap - a renowned Indologist; contributed
immensely to Sanskrit Studies; taught Sanskrit to Ph.D and M. Phil students…
2 comments:
Library Sale... brings back old memories :)
Thank you Sri Sundaram for mentioning my books in your blog. I friend like you appreciating my venture of book writing will certainly inspire me to write more books!
Panduranga
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