Wednesday 29 July 2015

21 Bookish Questions with Minnati Zaveri

As my ongoing web series with My Big Red Bag, this time I went to interview my dear friend Minnati Zaveri.

Minnati is a self-confessed book hoarder. She believes that reading provides the mind a quiet burrow where every turn of a page seems nothing short of a magic between her fingers. We both have a lot in common- hoarders, Murakami & Prufrock lovers, and chai addicts. Only thing I will never understand about her is despite being a die-hard Murakami fan she is a complete dog person!

Watch me ask Minnati Zaveri random 21 Bookish Question!


If you are a writer, poet, blogger or simply a fellow bookworm, I need you. Do drop me an email at foramdhruv92@gmail.com or you can tweet to me @readin_glasses. I am looking forward to hearing from you.


Friday 24 July 2015

Major Bookish Blunders

I have a confession to make. You probably may want to banish me from calling myself a book-lover after reading this post. But, Lord, have mercy!

I read this article on Books Riot about “Dangerous Consequence of a Book Life” where these Rioters were confessing about their major bookish mishaps. Well, being a clumsy person I too have had my fair share of accidental “blunders” as well. While the Rioters talk about how their mishaps took place as they were so engrossed in reading, I am talking about blunders that have taken place with me while I was busy being ignorant.

I have a habit of carrying what I am currently reading everywhere I go. Initially when I started working, my boss gave me a book to read. I had to be extra extra careful since she is extremely particular about her books. Once, I removed the book from my bag, and to my astonishment I noticed that the front cover of the book was fully bent!! Can you imagine my horror?!


I immediately put it under the fattest book I could find for six hours straight. Though the results were not that great but it didn’t seem as obvious as it was before.
(Talk about making an impression!)

You must have noticed how fat books have thicker spine and it is practically impossible to read properly. I had borrowed an expensive fat novel from a friend of mine. My friend is batshit insane about her books. While intently reading, the book “accidentally” got a crack in the spine.


(Yes, please take a moment of silence.)

It is weird how most of my blunders happen when I borrow books from others. Most of my friends who are particular about their books have stopped lending them to me, but most of the time I avoid asking anyone else for a book because I fear their reaction once I return them the book.

My Harry Potter collection is the oldest in my shelf. Since we (my sister and I) had the entire collection (1-7), all of our friends used to borrow them. So you will easily find maggi, tea, milk , and what-not stains in the book. While turning a page quickly I have even “accidentally” torn the page and then sellotaped it back together.

(In my defence, I was a kid.)

My tote bag is open, meaning it neither has a zip/ flap or a magnet button. Swoosh comes the rain and there goes my book!

I have had times when I have spilled the entire cup of coffee on the book lying on the table.


I have plenty of such random stories. My books and I share a very unique relationship. Despite treating them badly they always love me, no matter what. What else could I ask for?

I am assuming that none of you have had such blunders, it definitely is a blasphemy. But, if you did have such episodes do share and provide me with comfort while I go hide!



Wednesday 22 July 2015

21 Bookish Questions with Sana Shaikh

It has been a while since I posted my ongoing series of 21 Bookish Questions with My Big Red Bag on my blog.

In this video, I went to interview Sana Shaikh who is leading two lives- graphic designer by the day and a literary character during the night. Since her reading style is completely different from mine, doing this video with her was all the more fun.

Watch Sana answer 21 totally weird bookish impromptu questions, and find out if you have anything common with her.


You will find Sana pouring her heart out on a page when 
not day dreaming about cats.
 

If you are a writer, poet, blogger, or simply a fellow bookworm, I need you. Do drop me an email at foramdhruv92@gmail.com or you can tweet to me @readin_glasses. I am looking forward to hearing from you!

Saturday 18 July 2015

Reading Spot

Even the simplest of things can turn into something extremely complex. Like a text, we need to understand a word within a context. For example, consider the word “space”. “Space” has no specific meaning attached to it, the definition and perception of the word changes in accordance to the context. When I am talking about “space” with reference to “reading”, I mean a location or an area wherein one is able to read freely without any interruptions.


Reading is a hobby of leisure. It needs to performed when you are most relaxed. Therefore, it needs to be carried out in an area/ space which is cozy, comfortable, and makes you feel at home. This “space” of comfort, hence, is different for each one of us.


Coffee Shops
Imagine personalities like Hemingway, Eliot, Whitman and several others spending hours at coffee shops and creating history. Several people prefer reading at coffee shops or cafes. The romantic idea of reading at a cafe has a European notion attached to it. Though it proves to be difficult for people with a short span of attention as they easily get distracted, some people manage it really well, too engrossed in the book to care about their surroundings!



Parks
Parks are classic Victorian. Fantasise literary characters such as Jane and Lizzy in the background enjoying a good book. Parks/ gardens form as another alternative, ensuring the reader with complete tranquility and abundance of greenery. Sometimes, the scenario no matter how scenic turns vexatious, as, it is either too hot or there are ants lurking around everywhere making it impossible to for the reader to feel “relaxed”.


Reading Rooms
The age-old concept of reading room is just perfect. A complete silence zone, splendid for reading without any distractions. Reading rooms are slowly decaying and dying as less and less people are using it. It is sad to see this notion from the golden era gradually disappearing from this metropolitan world.  



Bed/ Couch
At the end of the day all you want is a bed, blanket, book and a coffee. There won’t be a single person whose favourite reading spot isn’t a bed or a couch. You loosen yourself, forgetting about all the worries of the day, and simply enjoy a good book while snuggling with your blanket. Bliss.






Hammock
Exotic vacation spot. Hammock. Murakami. If there is an epitome for comfortable reading, the award goes to hammocks. Who wouldn’t want to spend their lazy Sundays like this?













Beach
A summer romance with your latest rom-com novel, with an overwhelming and overpowering presence of the sea, is enough to put any reader in a state of euphoria.










Courtyard
My personal recommendation to Indian readers. Image from Arundhati Roy’s book immediately comes to my mind- a house with a large patio/ courtyard surrounded by different species of plants, pungent smell of rain, and  a cup of chai. A well deserved reading spot.






 

Home is where your book is. Which is your favourite reading spot? Where are you most comfortable reading? And most importantly, what is your definition of “domestic space”? 

Few questions whose answers you are subconsciously aware of, but never thought of it out loud. 

Food for thought until my next post.  

Sunday 12 July 2015

Shelf Maintenance


You might consider me totally wasted if I tell you that my favourite pastime is to clean my bookshelf/ book-cupboard, and rearrange all of my books EVERY WEEK.

My Saturday morning ritual is fixed– I remove all the books to make sure none of them has been bent (being in a cramped space) or gotten wet (due to rains). I clean the cupboard with a wet cloth then with a dry cloth, and finally put all the books back. This sacred ceremony takes me almost two-three hours. 
(Yes, priorities.) 

Depending on my mood, every week I try different ways of arranging it- genre wise, author wise, alphabetically, etc.

You are free to call it an obsession or an addiction. I prefer to call it ‘maintenance’. Just like an engine which needs servicing and oiling every now and then, so does our bookshelf. It often requires love, care and grooming. Probably every week is a little too much, but I realised I am not the only one.

It is only a matter of time when every reader ultimately turns into a hoarder. And everyone have diverse ways or ritual of maintaining their shelves. 

I asked some of my friends to share their bookish routine and a few pictures of their bookshelves. 

I was happy not to find myself alone.

Zahra Gabuji



Zahra's Bookshelf
Being a literature student, most of the books that you see on her shelf are similar to those on mine. Despite being a messy person, she is very particular about her books. She tells me that, “My bookshelf represents who I am. I have lived several of these characters. These books have been like little houses, you go inside and stay there for a while…

My husband, who is not a reader, organises the bookshelf and takes good care of it as well. He knows what it means to me. 
[Every reader’s definition of true love.]

Zahra's Bookshelf (close up from the right side)

Zahra's Bookshelf (close up from the left side)

Except cleaning the bookshelf and books every fortnight, I prefer arranging them according to their nationality and genre. I love to write/ scribble inside my novels- notes on characters, plot or anything else that I may find interesting, and I encourage my friends to do the same.”

(Thank You, Jalal Mortezai, for taking out time to click these pictures and emailing them to me.)

Ashna Bahl


We both have been borrowing each other’s books since the time we became friends. It was she who got me hooked to G. David’s Shantaram. Ashna thinks of her bookshelf as the least fanciest part of her house. She likes something sturdy so she can hoard her books on it.


I am such a hoarder that a part of my bookshelf actually broke and what you see are the remains of it. I clean my bookshelf every week, but more importantly I have a weird habit of changing every book’s position depending on which book I’m fond of at the moment.


Ashna's Bookshelf

Hence, you’ll find my favourites stacked at the top and least favourite ones at the bottom. 

Ashna's Bookshelf
Therefore any new book will find a place on the shelf depending on how much I liked it.” 

Minnati Zaveri


If you thought you had an obsession, you haven’t met Minnati. Her obsession with books is to another level.
(Psst...I am always too scared to borrow her books; she has like a million rules.)

“I'm very lucky to have my father agree to let me have a floor to ceiling (seriously) bookshelf in my room! I wanted a library ladder à la Beauty and the Beast, but never mind.


Minnati's floor to ceiling bookshelf
I have 4 compartments in my shelf, out of which the two smaller ones hold religious books and monthly glossies. The two bigger ones (of 8 shelves each) are where ALL my other books are kept. (Currently only 10 shelves out of the 16 are filled.)

I organize them largely height-wise, with some sets of books also organized author or genre wise (if their heights are the same, if not, then I rather prefer them height-wise). [This is where I tell you that she suffers from an obsessive-compulsive-disorder. She is a total neat-freak.]




The first of the larger book cases hold (in top to bottom order), one shelf of classic 18th century literature, followed by three shelves of literary fiction, followed by two shelves of chick lit.

Minnati's Bookshelf (close up)

Minnati's Bookshelf (close up)

The leather hardcover classics belonged to my paternal grandfather, who gave it to my father, who in turn gave them to me. They're an actual family heirloom, with some of the books dating back to over 60-70 years!



I clean and dust my bookshelf daily, and rearrange to accommodate new books on a monthly basis.”


Divyasha Jain

She is a lover of classics, who has a certain fixation with Russian classics. Her bookshelf/cupboard compliments mine.


Divyasha's Bookshelf
“I am way too attached with my bookshelf/ book-cupboard. It is my world. I can spend hours arranging and re-arranging these books or simply stare at them. Each book is a part of me and summarises my journey so far.


Divyasha's Bookshelf (close up)

Divyasha's Bookshelf (close up)

I clean my bookshelf every time I need to make space for new books. (That would be every month.)”

We are just 5 people among million other readers who share an unfathomable attachment with our respective books and bookshelves.

I will sum up with what Zahra and Divyasha told me. Our bookshelf represents us. We have lived several of these characters and stories. 

Each book summarises our journey so far.


Monday 6 July 2015

A Book for Everyone

A book for you,
A book for me,
A book for the young mamma
That got her through the de-li-very.

A book in need,
A book for a deed,
Is the book that we all want, indeed.

A book for my aunt,
A book for her niece,
A book for their maid
Who tries to read e-very-day.

A book that excites us all,
A book that binds us all,
Is the kind of book that says it all!

A book for a seller,
A book for a collector,
A book for the dog-walker
Who loves them all.

A book for sorrow,
A book for grief,
Is a book for happiness and relief.

A book for your shelf,
A book on your desk,
There is a book here
For Uncle Sam.

A book to try it on,
A book to wear it off,
There is a book, for that is all you want.

















One of my friends, who like me is an avid reader, told me that one of her batch-mate asked her to suggest a book to start off reading with. Whenever a non-reader asks us for a book suggestion, we get very excited and happy. Our happiness shoots through the roof as one more person is added to this happy family of book-worms. But she told me, she did not know which book to suggest! She was completely clueless. Not that she did not want him to read. It was mainly fear. Along with being happy for the fact that someone from now on will resort to the joy of reading, we are frightened, frightened to suggest that “one” book which will decide his/her reaction and future towards reading.

What genre would he/she prefer? Should I suggest my favourite book- isn’t that a bit too complex? I think I will suggest something fun and quirky. What about the book that got me started off reading with? I think he/she will definitely like this book, or maybe not?! – These are just a few random thoughts that haunt us when we are asked for a book recommendation. We are put in a tight spot.  

The fear that resides in a reader is genuine. They desperately want their non-reader friends to read the books they liked themselves. There is a sense of urgency to catch up on books/ reading they have missed so far.  

The best way to begin reading is to start with popular fiction. Once you get acquainted with the style, you can then slowly move on and discover new/other genres.

Everyone has a different reading style- a book you loved might not affect me that much and vice versa. We need to discover our reading style, as it is in a constant state of evolution. Every reader evolves after a period of time. I started off reading with Nancy Drew and Famous Five, shifting to Sidney Sheldon and Nora Roberts, then shifting to Dan Brown and Sherlock Holmes, and finally settling on likes of Rushdie and Marquez. The flow chart for every person varies.

There are more than a million books to choose from, and there is one for everyone and anyone. A book never fails you. It doesn’t have a right perspective, it shapes its meaning in accordance to your understanding. All you need is patience and love. My advice to a first time reader is not to judge; give it some time and let it grow on you! The pleasures of reading are innumerable.

To help you out, I will soon come up with a Beginners Reading List. Try to have some fun and discover this new-found hobby.

Happy Reading until my next post!