Daddy
is a conspicuous bibliophile
I’ve spent every summer from the age of 3 to 18
in Kuwait. I remember being surrounded by books in all shapes and sizes,
stacked up in boxes or resting on shelves that hugged the walls of the spare room. My
dad is a reader.
Mom, an official of the Clean Squad, would hand
us a duster and lock us away in the room, with the promise of biryani. Daddy, armed with the cleaning
cloth and his reading glasses, would sit in a little corner and patiently sift
through each of his prized possessions. He would eagerly want to show me all of
his hundred-odd James Hardly Chase novels at once but he'd begin by
grabbing my attention with the colourful pictures in his treasured National
Geographic magazines; ones that date back at least 30 years.
This routine would play out as soon as Mummy would find Daddy ambling about at home over the weekend. There was only one thing for him to do—something, anything about the books! We would then quickly scamper to his little library (poorly disguised as my visiting room) and begin with the tidying.
This routine would play out as soon as Mummy would find Daddy ambling about at home over the weekend. There was only one thing for him to do—something, anything about the books! We would then quickly scamper to his little library (poorly disguised as my visiting room) and begin with the tidying.
Come to think of it, that was when little me—in
my PJs and bob cut—was hooked on to the myriad worlds that awaited
bound between spines in all sizes. Those sessions introduced me to the whiff of old
books and my father’s fondness for the written word.
He would ever-so-tenderly empty one over-flowing
carton at a time, and wipe clean the thin film
of dust on the books’ covers—front, then back. He would then page through the
introduction and read out when, and from where, he had gotten the book; a habit
I’ve inherited. It made him so happy; I vividly remember it showing on his pink
face.
We’d rearrange magazines as we spoke about his favourite genres—history, fiction, and mystery. He asked me what I liked to read best. I’d lamely manage the names of a few Hardy Boys and Nancy Drew novels I’d chanced upon in my school’s library. Now that I think of it, something triumphed inside him when we had these talks. He knew which one of his three little ones would inherit his treasures, when the time was right.
To date, my father does not go to bed before he
has read. It’s a virtue in his eyes, not to be loosely categorised as a habit. I have him to thank for
so many things but our shared love for words on pages is number one.
Mummy, on the other hand, silently stood at the
doorway and smiled at her two crazy hoarders. The both of us have her to thank
for completely understanding the obsession and oh-so lovingly humouring it.
Post-script: This is the
new bookshelf of my new life. I’ve been lucky to find a man, yet again, who is
as obsessed with reading as my number one guy.
Hello sabiha. .I got to know abt your blog in the youth magazine as u have been featured as the blogger of the month..
ReplyDeleteFrom all the blogs I read if you ..This makes me feel I dunno what ..coz recently I started feeling like I want to spend rest of my life reading amazing books but nobody in my past has got me the ground to this habit ..u are lucky you got the right guys ...
I just hope I manage without the guys ..my new found passion for reading..
Hello, thank you for dropping by. You're right. I was born in the right family and then married a man who shares my passions but it doesn't have to be like that for you.
DeleteIf you've already decided you want to spend your time reading, the world is your oyster! I recommend you sign up on goodreads.com. It will open a large avenue for you to explore this new-found passion.
All the best. May you become your own hero.