FINDING THE PLOT IN A WORLD OF BOOKS!

 
My Book World

I still remember the first time in my life I could not put a book down. It was my Enid Blyton phase, and the book was ‘The Secret of Moon Castle’. Eerie dim lit rooms, clanking suits of armour, paintings flying off the wall and eyes moving within portraits… all designed to leave me awake, my heart in my mouth all night. The next morning would find me racoon-eyed, yet desperately needing to go and scare my friends with the story that had left me so.

                                                                                              World of Blyton

 Of course, I was no stranger to tales that sent a chill up my little spine. Before I began to decipher words on my own, my maternal grandfather, a litterateur in his own right, would seat me beside him and describe the events of poems as eventful as ‘The Highwayman’, The Lady of Shalott’ and ‘Lord Ullin’s daughter’, all of which were specially meant to scare the heebie-jeebies out of impressionable young minds. After all, they all had elements of suspense, violence and death. However, the way in which he recounted the stories made me hang on to his every word and fall in love with English poetry even at that age.

https://kathleenbaldwin.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/Alfred-Noyes-The-Highwayman-on-blue-background.pdf

                                                                          The Lady of Shalott - Wikipedia

My mother, his daughter after all, took the baton from him. On balmy nights, we would sit in the garden where she would transport me into a world that seemed so far from what I was used to. The two images that still remain in my mind are from two of my favourite classics of all times – The Count of Monte Cristo where a young Edmond Dantes is shipped off to the Château d'If, a grim prison, that looms before him, where he is sentenced to spend the rest of his life for a crime that he has not committed. The second image that populated my dreams for ages was that of Quasimodo, the mishappen hunchback of Notre Dame, who falls in love with the exquisite Esmeralda and discovers that he has a heart after all. Two brilliant stories that carried the gamut of all human experiences - love, betrayal, greed, passion and retribution.

                                                                                                DC Books


                                                                                                 Goodreads

I had the opportunity to spend two years with my paternal grandparents while in school since my father was posted in a station that had not many good schools. While there, I discovered myriad books on Indian mythology, including the seven volumes of Krishnavatara by K M Munshi. While I was aware of the epics, having read them in their simplest form, I understood that there was so much more to the playful Krishna than I had ever imagined. Like a wonderstruck Arjuna witnessing him in his resplendent Vishwaroopa, I peeled off the layers, my young mind delighting in nuggets of wisdom disguised as wonderful stories.


                                                                                                           Hindu

Amar Chitra Katha nestled beside Archie comics, Greek and World folktales opened new worlds and Little Women and Pride and Prejudice found space alongside Ruskin Bond, Tagore and RK Narayan. What was amazing was that my parents bought me (and my sisters) books every month, not based on their prices but on the content they had to offer. Birthdays found us waiting to tear open our gifts and to squeal in glee when we found the exact books that we had been longing to read. It was a beautiful childhood, indeed!


                                                                                                    The Statesman

                                                                                                          Unsplash

Humour came in the form of the inimitable PG Wodehouse, who regaled us with his witticisms, his sagas on Bertie Wooster and his stoic Jeeves, his adventures of witty damsels, absent minded earls, indomitable aunts and frankly ‘dodgy’ characters who could not be trusted. Many a time I found myself chuckling to myself on a train, or in my balcony, over the descriptions which only Wodehouse, with a straight face, could come up with.

 

Waterstones

From very early in life, I realised that I wanted to be a writer. I began with writing my first poem at the age of ten, and today, many decades later, I needed to give back something to the world of literature, albeit in a small way, a kind of homage, perhaps. That is how, with the help of Readomania Publishers, I brought out three adaptations for young readers, just so they could delve into them and decide whether they need to go the whole hog and dive into the originals. Needless to say, these adaptations are extremely close to my heart. 



                                                                                    Amazon.in

Today, my greatest regret is that reading sometimes takes a back seat, with life having decided to butt in, in so many ways. I take longer to finish a book, and sometimes, I do need to re-read certain parts to take the essence in. While the books I had read in my youth and childhood stay on, firmly entrenched in my imagination, some of the books I read recently do not. Is that because my concentration levels have come down, or are the books to blame? Maybe more the former, I guess!

Dan Brown, Khaled Hosseini, Arundhati Roy, Coleen Hoover, Kristin Hannah, Chitra Banerjee, JK Rowling, Haruki Murakami, Kazuo Ishiguro, Shashi Tharoor, Abraham Varghese, Ashwin Sanghi, Amish Tripathi… the list of popular writers is open-ended. Readomania Publishers helmed by the intrepid Dipankar Mukherjee, is one publishing house bringing out interesting and intriguing books in myriad genres for adults and children.

Today, more people are writing than ever before, and it is impossible to get your head around all the books written across the world.

 So finally, when a window opens, I read what I can, and when the going gets too tough, I fall back on my favourite genre – mystery and thrillers – and pick up either Agatha Christie, Stephen King or Mary Higgins Clark.

 This post is a part of ''Plot Twist Blog Hop hosted by Manali Desai and Sukaina Majeed under #EveryConversationMatters.

Comments

  1. What a fun walk down the memory lane this was! And yes, life does come in the way of reading :)

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    1. Thank you so much, Natasha! I am glad that you enjoyed my post. 😊

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  2. There's something in common between us: being introduced to books in childhood. Many of those classics were my reading too though a little later.

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    1. That is exactly why those days were so exciting! Maybe, there were many others who were also like us... avid readers. Classics are evergreen, after all!

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  3. It's amazing how Enid Blyton has been a part of so many generations' childhood reading, isn't it?
    Sigh! I too regret that life gets in the way of reading. At least we have our writing to make up for that loss though, right?

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    1. That's so true, Manali! Writing has turned into our new reading, I guess! 😊

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  4. This was such a relatable read! I think many of us feel that regret of taking longer to finish a book now than we did as children. Thank you for sharing the diverse list of authors!

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    1. You're welcome, Anusha! Childhood days were easier and hence, we could read without interruption. Nowadays, it is more of an effort!

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  5. As a child, I was more inclined to books than anything else. And Enid Blyton, Ladybird classics, Amar Chitra Katha were part of my growing up years.

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    1. I can relate to that, Reubenna. I think many of our contemporaries also had these books on the reading lists.

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    2. I can relate to that, Reubenna. I think many of our contemporaries also had these books on the reading lists.

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  6. I so agree. Life has a way of coming in all the time. Past few years have been tough for me & I have been struggling with the concentration span too. It is an honor to have known you Ma'am, someone with such vast knowledge !

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    1. Dear Chinmayee, that is so sweet of you. I do hope that you find the mind space to read all the books that you want to read. God bless!

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  7. It was lovely reading about your bookish journey. Even I started with Enid Blyton and I remember the thrill and the happiness the books gave me. I am reading slowly too now unless I am participating in some reading challenges to push me otherwise I take my own sweet time to read and soak in.

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    1. Pinkii, the older we grow, the more time we take to savour the books we read. That is why we end up choosing those books that speak to us.

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  8. Wow! You have read some great books. It was wonderful to read about your reading journey.

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    1. Thank you so much, Malvika! I grew up in an era when reading was one of the only forms of entertainment, thank God! :)

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