In the normal course of things one goes looking for books but sometimes though not very often the books come to one on their own. Something like that happened to me at Abids the previous Sunday, so this post is not exactly about last Sunday’s haul. I remember only two occasions when a seller at Abids stopped me and said he had something in a bag that I might find interesting. Unfortunately, that wasn’t the case but in order not to disappoint him I had bought a book though I wouldn’t have read it. I did it to encourage him to show me books that he did not display on the pavement in the hope of finding a good title some day.
The previous Sunday the seller who has a good collection most of them almost brand new titles stopped me and asked me to take a look at a few books he had in a bag. I was a bit excited wondering if I would find something very good. He took out a hardcover title that unfortunately was in German! Then when he took out another hardcover with a greenish cover I was excited. It was a copy of ‘Inside Africa’ by John Gunther, another title on my Africa shelf. Many years ago I had found a copy of ‘Death Be Not Proud’ by John Gunther though at that time I did not know he was a journalist because I did not read the book after discovering it was about the untimely and tragic death of his son. At that time my own kid was about the same age and I couldn’t bring myself to read that book. Anyway, I was glad I found ‘Inside Africa’ that was about nine hundred pages long that appears to be an interesting read. I also learnt that he had written other ‘Inside’ series especially about Asia and also America that I hope to find someday.
The second book he took out was also a hardcover copy of ‘The Yemen: Imams Rulers and Revolutionaries’ by Harold Ingrams. This seemed to be by a diplomat so I was not very excited but nevertheless bought it along with another hardcover title, ‘The View from Steamer Point’ by Charles Johnston. I had to pay quite a packetfor these three books that were also heavy to carry. Then the next find was a copy of ‘Best Loved Indian Stories of the century’ edited by Indira Srinivasan and Chetna Bhatt. It had a beautiful blue cover and was a Penguin title so I bought it even without looking inside for the list of stories. Later I sat in the Star of India along with two friends who were already in the café and managed to look at the list of stories in it. There were twenty-three stories in it all of them English translations from various Indian languages. I was glad to find there was a story by a Tamil writer I like very much- Pudumaipithan- titled ‘Redemption’. Now this was Volume -II which means there’s a volume-I somewhere out there that I have to find.
On the way home I stopped at Chikkadpally and found a copy of ‘Bookless in Baghdad’ by Shashi Tharoor. I already have a copy of this hardcover book that I have also read but I couldn’t resist buying a second copy.
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