The World of My Books – My Many Histories
Each book in my library has a unique appeal.
I never walk across a book-shelf
without stealing a glance at the spines of the stacked volumes. Often, I linger
over them, when such a fancy seizes me and the moments of my life are not hemmed
in by the demands of a workaday routine. Sometimes a chance remembrance brings
a whiff of a scintillating experience I have had reading a book. I then head
towards them with a zeal. I dive into my collection, one genre leads to
another, a book of an author reminds me of his other works, glimpse of a book
peeping from the rear prompts me to bring down the row in the front; I sit
surrounded by mounds of books, pick one from the pile and live again the time I
had spent with the book – years, perhaps decades, ago.
Words of the author breath life
in to the inert pages of a book. This is the character a book is born with.
Each reader brings to a book, a
world all his own, because no two individuals are alike. With every new reader
book unfolds a new meaning, and acquires a new life.
I spend days, often weeks, with a
book. In my company, book adds another facet to its persona; The place where I
read the book, time of the day and the season of the year when I read it, my
mood, sorrows, and joys that were a part of my life then, are forever imbued in
the book’s personality. This is a singular experience that only I share with it.
The derelict station I was posted
to soon after internship, beastly cold of a Delhi winter experienced after a
decade in south, and my utter loneliness then, are embedded in my copy of
William L Shirer’s The Rise and Fall of Third Reich. This was the first
history of Second World War I read. It was riveting. After work I sat with the
book in the small lawn facing my room, mild warmth of a fading day enhancing
the joy of reading. Sudden chill in the air, when the last rays of sun
disappeared behind the horizon, prompted me to go indoors.
Gulzar’s teleserial, Mirza
Ghalib, had been aired on Doordarshan, a year before my first posting. I was
bowled over by the serial: Jagjit Singh’s music, Nasiruddin Shah’s portrayal of
Ghalib, and Ghalib’s poetry – though, only a miniscule selection was chosen for
the biopic. I bought Ali Sardar Jafri-edited Ghalibnama, a collection of
Ghalib’s complete Urdu verse. I read Ghalib after morning’s work at the clinic.
I was quite alone even at work. A stray patient walked in occasionally. There
were only a couple of male nurses, who had learnt to make themselves scarce in
the station that had no need of them. My happiest memories of the run-down
clinic are of reading Ghalib. I had not read such profound poetry before. I had
no grasp of Urdu. The senior nurse, Salim, would willingly help me with
difficult words. I marked the outstanding ghazals in the book. This copy sits
on a shelf besides my reading chair. I pick it up often to drink of the poetry within
and reminisce the days I came to know Ghalib – the forlorn station, the ramshackle
clinic, and an ever-gnawing boredom.
Ronald W. Clark’s biography of
Einstein recalls the time I visited the small hospital on the banks of Hindon
river for a short period. I remember the dark room in the mess where I stayed, perpetually
under the shade of huge trees. It was difficult to put the book aside to dress
up and climb down for meals in the dining room. It was the first biography of a
scientist I read that was a page-turner.
Another biography of Einstein,
which I began after a couple of years, is associated with some wretched
memories. I was at a hospital in Chanakyapuri in Delhi where my father was
admitted for the extraction of an artificial hip joint that had got infected, a
few weeks after it was implanted. It was his fourth surgery in six weeks. Throughout
the day, he lay on the bed, staring at the ceiling. I sat beside him with
Walter Isaacson’s Einstein. I would read page after page without grasping
a word. The wall-to-wall window across the bed framed the naked autumn trees
standing mutely in the large grounds of the hospital. It was heart rending to
hear and observe my stoic and utterly resigned father wince with muffled cries
of pain as the physiotherapist tried to walk him on the limb that was now
bereft of a hip joint. When the room oppressed me unbearably, I would drag
myself to the cafeteria located in the garden. The same trees were visible here
too. Ground was carpeted in fallen leaves. I drank coffee without opening the
book. I was in the hospital for seven days. In a different time, I would have
remembered this hospital for its beauty. I never finished the book and though it
is a well-written, unbiased biography, I still have not gone back to it.
I had read many books of Somerset
Maugham when I came to Pune for MD, but the first I came to possess was Razor’s
Edge. I bought it at a book fair in the city. Like everything else in Pune
then, when I compare it to the ostentatious Delhi that I came to witness later,
exhibition was a spartan affair. In a modest-sized hall, barely larger than the
drawing room of a luxury condominium, few tables were laid, covered with white
sheets. Books were neatly arranged on them, flat not stacked. I readily
detected the single copy of Razor’s Edge staring at me. I have read the
book again a couple of times in the past decades. The book, themed on the Hindu
philosophy of renunciation, always reminds me of the austere book-fair where I
bought it.
I was consumed with greed when
internet proffered an unlimited access to best books available in the country.
Arrival of amazon.in literally lay the power to buy any book I wanted at my fingertips.
I read frantically in those days. I soon realised that time I had left in this
world was the only factor that would decide number of books I would leave
unread. I set up a target of hundred pages a day and easily achieved this even
as I enjoyed the book immensely. Robert Fisk’s The Great War for
Civilisation, a sweeping contemporary history of Middle-East and
Ramachandra Guha’s India After Gandhi, a narrative history of India from
around independence to early 2000s, both tomes of about eleven-hundred
pages each, remind me of this fevered period in my reading life. Today, I
cannot look at them without ruing my tardy reading now – I had finished both in
7-10 days each; but about two decades ago.
Bill Bryson’s Troublesome
Words was the first book I read in its genre i.e., English language. Though
the book is highly readable, and faultlessly lucid, and perhaps because it is
such a splendid book, I could not bring myself to finish it in a few days. I
read it for a few minutes every day as I sipped my morning cup of tea – the
time of the day when mind is freshest and most receptive, and the joys imbibed
linger for long. Knowing the spread of my ignorance was never so pleasurable.
I bought many English-usage books
and style guides later. A few languorous moments that come my way – when
I return from the ritual of cycling in the morning and sit down for tea – are
spent with these books. Patricia T. O’Conner’s Woe Is I, Benjamin Dreyer’s
Dreyer’s English, are among many that have brightened my mornings.
Another summer in Hindon is
etched in my memory as the time I was introduced to the wonders of astronomy.
My top-floor room burned like an oven. My family had not yet shifted to the new
station and I had moved with only a suitcase and a carton of books in my car. I
would continuously move the cooler, this way and that, without a whiff of cold
air reaching me, as there was none in the moribund cooler. Brian Greene’s The
Fabric of The Cosmos made the misery bearable. I was awestruck by Greene’s
staggeringly simple explanations of the difficult astronomy conundrums. It was
frightening to hover on the brink as a foggy understanding dawned on my dense
ignorance about the mysteries of universe. I added another obsessive track to
my bibliomania and bought many books on physics, each as engrossing as they
were illuminating.
I discovered Steven Weinberg in
this search. I read his classic book on the origin of universe, The First
Three Minutes, in the army transit camp near Guwahati railway station. I was
staying there overnight, to catch a flight home the next day. I remember the
small cosy room and the innumerable cups of tea I ordered from the café as I
read Weinberg’s incredibly eloquent description of the early universe. Now the
book always reminds me of the heavily guarded guest house, soldiers in their combat
uniforms waiting patiently in queue with heavy rucksacks slung on their
shoulders, and the hubbub of traffic on the street outside the gate.
All travel books are not dull
guides, or endlessly babbling, unimaginative travelogues; I realised this as I
read my first travel book of Bill Bryson, Neither Here nor There, an
account of his travels in Europe. I read the book sprawled on a lawn chair in
my garden, during a long vacation in winters. Side-splitting humour would make
me roll in laughter every few minutes, threatening to bundle me off the chair.
Looking up, I found amused neighbours watching the spectacle from their
first-floor-balcony. Every time I look at the book, I am effortlessly
transported to a sunny lawn, hedged by flower beds, on a crisp winter-day.
Richard Dawkins’ wonderful ode to
the poetry of science, Unweaving the Rainbow, wraps around itself memories
of a holiday in the Himalayan town of Dalhousie. I read the book, spellbound by
Dawkins’ elegantly fluid prose, swathed in woollens, sitting beside an electric
heater, as rain pattered the roof, and dripped from the eaves.
I remember reading a biography of
the Urdu poet Faiz Ahmed Faiz, Love and Revolution, during another
holiday in the hills of Uttarakhand at Binsar forest sanctuary. A friend, a
bibliobibuli nonpareil, had gifted it. I sat in the sunny courtyard of the
beautiful resort, surrounded by tall oaks, and rhododendrons, and read amid
endless cups of filter coffee supplied by the generous host.
A misfortune had rocked our
placid lives about this time. It felt as if ground had moved from beneath our
feet. The sense of utter helplessness and foreboding of an impending doom had
passed, as everything in life – good or bad – invariably does, but we grieved at
the devastation left in its wake.
Faiz, with Ghalib, sits on a
bookshelf beside the chair where I read. One night, I casually picked up Saare
Sukhan Hamare, collection of his complete poetry, and flipped its pages. I
came across a small nazm, I had not noticed before, Khwab-Basera. It
beautifully, and fittingly resonated with my emotions and feelings then. It
felt my grief had found words. Since then, every time I look at Saare Sukhan
Hamare on the shelf, ineffaceably beautiful words of Khwab-basera
bubble up effortlessly in my memory: ‘इस वक़्त तो यूँ लगता है अब कुछ भी नहीं है, महताब न सूरज, न अँधेरा न सवेरा’.
The stifling, muggy hot months I
spent in an Air Force Station in Assam, as I waited to secure voluntary
retirement from service, remind me of many books. I read under a fan that evenly
spread the sweltering heavy air in the room. Every time I rummage through my
Dawkins collection, The Greatest Show on Earth, a big book that majestically
presents extant evidence for evolution, reminds me of my last days in Air Force:
my bare room in the mess, a few books stacked on the writing table beside the
small electric kettle for coffee, long walks in dusk on a narrow road that
hugged the airfield, anxiety about a new work environment in private hospitals,
and deepening nostalgia for the life I was quitting after nearly three decades
in service.
My copy of Daniel Kahneman’s Thinking
Fast and Slow is imprinted with vivid pictures of: IGI airport, where I
bought the book; It’s VIP lounge – courtesy a government-sponsored trip to UK, that
saw us upgraded to business class; my irrepressible excitement, for this was my
first visit to Europe; the persistent entreaties of the flight attendants for
wine, beer, snacks, and many-course meals; my jaw-dropping wonder as I walked
the central London streets strewn with massive, daunting, imperial architecture;
my amazement as I looked at Raphael, Gauguin, Vincent van Gogh, at London’s
humungous museums; morning walks in the bewitchingly charming rural England,
and evenings spent treading the cobbled streets of towns or wide roads of
London – each feigning a familiarity conditioned by Dickens, Christie, Conan
Doyle I had devoured decades ago. Thinking Fast and Slow is the paragon
of science written for laypersons. It introduced me to the astonishing world of
cognitive psychology and changed the manner I look – or attempt to look – at
our behaviour.
There are books that I find
ordinary or even cumbersome. But I am a pernickety, superstitious reader. I
cannot leave a book unfinished, however tedious, or stressful reading it may be
– a warped sense of morality chastises me for long if I do. On occasions I have
gone back to a book that in past I had judged lacklustre. Not infrequently, I
have berated myself for being harebrained before, as I read the book again. One
reads a book with his eyes but experiences it through his complete personality.
We are not the same person today as we were in the past. Stephen Hawking’s small
book on the immeasurably large universe, A Brief History of Time, and Steven
Pinker’s style guide for beginners The Sense of Style, always remind me
that it is never a folly to return to a book after a little while; especially
when the first experience had been unremarkable.
Not all my books have such
narratives hidden in their pages. But an account of the few that do, will comprise
a book-length story.
Memory is not analogous, but
digital. Capacity of our brain, massive though it is, is grossly inadequate to
store all one endures in life. We see our life-stories, as discrete experiences
– only a miniscule fraction of all our life moments – threaded on the string of
time. From these we build narratives, and reminisce the vagaries of past.
My books are the pegs on which
are hung some moments of my past.
Comments
Post a Comment