I went to the Chennai Book Fair, and came back with lots of hope!

The Chennai Book Fair -- incidentally, India's largest book fair -- is on in our own city. Don't miss the experience the joy of holding, smelling and reading a new book!

Every year, the Chennai Book Fair comes to town right on the heels of the Chennai Music Season, but clearly the Book Fair has a much larger appeal. This year, in its 42nd year, it has returned to the sprawling grounds of YMCA Nandanam. The newspapers reported that earlier this week, the Book Fair saw a record 8 lakh visitors on a single day! Over the course of 17 days, the fair expects over 2 million visitors.

The organisers, Booksellers and Publishers Association of South India (BAPASI) have gone to great lengths to ensure that visitors have a good time. Traffic, both vehicular and pedestrian, is directed with appropriate signages and plenty of parking. There are multiple ticket windows, so that there is no line to enter. The aisles are wide and well- ventilated (contrary to my experience at most exhibitions) and there are several exit points, so at no place inside did it look too cramped or claustrophobic.. But boy! Was the place abuzz!!

It became instantly clear to anyone who visited the Book Fair, that reading is not yet a dying habit, thankfully. People young and old are reading, techies are reading, grandparents, parents and kids are reading, officials are reading, college and school students are reading… People are reading. (On another note, the ASER report that 96% of Class 2 children in rural Tamil Nadu cannot read an age appropriate text, is very disheartening. How will our future generation know the joy of reading, if they don’t learn it young?)..

What joy! So much variety for young readers! Pic: Balakumar, Casualwalker.com

Yes, Amazon tries to make you read on the Kindle, and they were there at the Book Fair, trying to make you buy a Kindle.. but it was a solitary stall, and it was empty on a busy afternoon. Most people clearly want to  pick up and browse through a book, inhale the wonderful smell of a new book, and then take it home – to curl up and read it with a cuppa.

The Kindle stall.. Not too many takers? Pic: Meenakshi Ramesh

The number of publishers selling Tamil books was staggering.. happily so. Tamil literature is a great treasure trove, and as I walked past stalls selling books ranging from Kalki’s classic Ponniyin Selvan to Bakkiyam Ramaswamy’s side-splitting Appusamy and Seetha Paati series, and from Thiruvalluvar’s Thirukkural to Subramania Bharati’s poetry, I said a silent Thank you to my grandmother, who had insisted, all those years ago, that I learn to read and write in my mother tongue. And I bought myself a Tamil book.

Variety of books in Tamil. Pic: Balakumar, Casualwalker.com

Any and every publisher worth his or her salt was to be seen at the fair. From the giants of the business to tiny local publishers, they were all there. Another stall that had me instantly in flashback mode – Amar Chitra Katha. The brand is constantly reinventing itself and I counted many new titles – some historical and some contemporary – along with the ubiquitous Tinkle, at their stall.

Flashback to Childhood! Pic: Balakumar, Casualwalker.com

Books that coach students to take the UPSC exams are a big draw at the Fair, which in turn tells us that the IAS and other services continue to be great career aspirations for the youth of the country. Many publishers and academies are represented at the book fair, each trying to out-advertise the other. One academy had decked all the hallways in their red banners (almost Christmassy)!

Deck the halls with streamers! Pic: Meenakshi Ramesh

I also noticed that the TN Plastic Ban, which came into effect on January 1 this year, was mentioned prominently at many places, and hardly any stalls gave out plastic bags. Quite a few visitors had brought their own bags. But sadly, many many booksellers were giving away non woven PP bags (which the public is misled into believing are cloth bags –they are not). There needs to be a lot more awareness on alternatives to single use plastic. Sigh…!

A Chennai-based publisher of children’s books gives away cloth bags to carry the books home. Pic: Balakumar, casual walker.com

I simply had to stop at the Self-publishing stall. (nope, no book for me on the anvil, but doesn’t hurt to find out what it takes). So they were explaining to the public, that like most everything these days, publishing too has gone online, and aspiring authors can now fast track their books from writing to editing to publishing! There are options to print physical copies or put them out as e-books. The authors can track sales, get marketing advice, etc. all online. Wow! That is all it takes?!

An aspiring author explores self-publishing. Pic: Meenakshi Ramesh

Hope and joy, I got in plenty at the fair. The printed book is alive and well. Now all I need is some inspiration! To write one! In the meantime, please don’t miss the fair – for the first time they have extended it beyond Pongal – until January 20th.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Similar Story

Chennai Councillor Talk: Rathika aims to resolve long-standing patta issues in Ward 174

Flooding and sewage overflow are major problems in Chennai's Ward 174. Here is how Councillor Rathika is addressing them.

Like many first-time councillors in Chennai, Ward 174 Councillor M Rathika entered grassroots politics because of the reservation for women in urban local body elections. Ward 174 was one of the wards reserved for women (general) in the 2022 local body polls. Coming from a family with a political background, she had been working on the ground with her brother for years. When the elections were announced, she was given a seat to contest and won by around 5,000 votes. Ward 174 Name of Councillor: M Rathika Party: DMK Age: 44 Educational Qualification: Undergraduate Contact: 9445467174 / 9566165526 Ward 174…

Similar Story

City Buzz: Pollution chokes Delhi, north | Report lauds free bus rides for women

Other news: Successful reduction in road crash fatalities in Punjab, flood mitigation in Chennai and alarming annual rise in cybercrimes.

Delhi air 'severe plus'; North India reels under air pollution Delhi's air quality has been going from bad to worse since Diwali, and the air quality index plummeted to hit 'severe plus' category, at 457 on the evening of November 17th. At 8 am on Monday, November 18th, data from the Central Pollution Control Board pointed to a daily average AQI of 484. After days of hovering at severe levels (AQI of 400-450) it crossed the threshold, prompting the Commission for Air Quality Management to invoke implementation of Stage 4 of the Graded Response Action Plan, or GRAP, across the National…