Neither better nor worse

I expect to go to a book fair to find books that I cannot find on an average day's trawl through bookstores on MG Road and Church Street.

This year’s Bangalore Book Festival was neither better nor worse than usual, which is to say that it mainly offered the advantages of visiting a number of more or less ordinary bookstores in a single venue.

I am always on the look-out for translations of literature from different countries and regions into English, but if this was a focus area at the Festival, it was not evident to me in the few hours I spent there.

By and large, apart from the special focus sections on Kannada literature, the exhibitors had the usual run of the mill fare you find in any city bookstore. There was very little effort made to offer special material at the Festival. Penguin has a great series of Modern Classics going on, and their stall was especially pathetic in this respect, with barely a handful of these titles on display. Similarly, I would have liked to see booksellers trying to offer sets of releases from some of the better literary lists in the publishing world today (Vintage Classics, NYRB Classics, Canongate Myths and specialist stuff life the excellent Wordsworth Mystery & Supernatural series).

Instead, I saw a lot of random displays of bestsellers, mass-market paperbacks and coffee table books. The only stalls with any real substance for someone looking for unusual and old books were East West Books and the stalwart Select Book House. One expects the newer semi-used book stores to try and distinguish themselves by offering a focus on contemporary and genre literature to complement the older stores’ focus on antiquarian books, but no such luck.

I expect to go to a book fair to find books that I cannot find on an average day’s trawl through the bookstores on MG Road and Church Street. I was largely disappointed in this respect.

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Your email address will not be published.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

Dog park in south Mumbai vacant for more than a year

A functional dog park remains unopened in Worli, even as pet parents in Mumbai struggle to find open spaces for their furry friends.

Any pet parent will tell you that dogs need a safe space where they can be free and get their requisite daily exercise. Leashed walks can fulfil only a part of their exercise requirement. Especially dogs belonging to larger breeds are more energetic and need to run free to expend their energy and to grow and develop well. This is especially difficult in a city like Mumbai where traffic concerns and the territorial nature of street dogs makes it impossible for pet parents to let their dogs off the leash even for a moment. My German Shepherd herself has developed…

Similar Story

Mumbai’s invisible beaches: A photo-story

Mumbai's shoreline may be famous for iconic beaches like Juhu and Girgaum but there's much more to it, says a city photographer.

Once a year, I inadvertently overhear someone wondering aloud about the sea level while crossing the Mahim or Thane Creek bridges without realising that the sea has tides. Similar conversations are heard at the beaches too. The Bandra Worli Sea Link, which now features in almost every movie about Mumbai, as seen from Mahim. Pic: MS Gopal Not being aware of tides often leads to lovers being stranded on the rocks along the coast, or even people getting washed away by waves during the monsoons. People regularly throng the sea-fronts of Mumbai - sometimes the beaches, sometimes the promenades, but…