Who/What inspired you to read?
This had been one popular topic of discussion the entire
last week for me and my friends. H, the eldest among three kids, picked up
books to keep away a kind of gnawing loneliness. She found it hard to live in
the cacophony at home and needed a chance to run away. She picked up an Enid
Blyton by pure chance at an Aunt’s house and was immediately transported to
Kirrin Island with George, Dick and Anne. She petted Timmy, fell in love with
Aunt Fanny, drank ginger beer and ate ham rolls. Life became perfect and books
became the oasis when she thirsted for happiness.
M had an aversion to books. He couldn’t imagine that kids
could spend their pocket money to buy a book to read for ‘pleasure’. He had a
qualm reverence for such folks and kept away from them for the first 20 years
of his life. Then he fell in love with a goddess and as goddesses are, she
barely noticed this mortal soul longing for her. He needed to reach her in some
way and he noticed that she loved to read. He picked up an Agatha Christie, the
author she seemed to be fond of, and read it through in a single sitting. He
liked it. Later, in the college library…
Librarian: I have only this one. No other Agatha Christie.
M: It’s wonderful.
Goddess looked at him. M looked down to see if his feet were
still on the floor. He felt kind of wobbly.
M: I just read Sleeping Murder. It is a Miss Marple one and
it is fabulous. I’m sure you will like it.
Goddess: Is it better than Poirot?
M (Who had no idea whether Poirot was an author or a
character!): Hmmm… I found it as good as Poirot. I’ll give it to you and you
can decide.
Goddess: Oh, thanks!
They walked out of the library together that day. Months
flew by and the goddess walked away from his life but Agatha Christie didn’t.
He became an avid reader.
Me, my hubby and most others didn’t have such interesting
tales to share. We loved to read because we were born into a family that loved
to read. My husband has shifted home for some 7 times in his childhood and each
time with a truckload of books. He was surrounded by a sea of books all through
life and reading came upon him as naturally as breathing or walking.
It was not so natural to me. Reading came upon me as a
curiosity. I found it hard to believe that something could snatch away my
mother’s attention from me. I loved books. They were alright when she read them
out to me during each meal. They were even alright when she read them to put me
to sleep. However, mine had pictures of palaces and princesses and hers had
nothing. They were fat and boring.
Still, I always found her with a book. Even when she was
cooking, while one hand held the ladle, the other held a book. When I did my
homework, she sat on the sofa beside me and read a book. I have hardly seen her
watch television and I have hardly seen her without her book. She read in the
quiet of the morning before we could wake up and she read herself to sleep
every night. Sometimes I saw her laugh into her book and sometimes I saw her
wipe away a silent tear. She seemed to be in another world and I wanted to go
there too. The activity of reading enticed me even before I turned five.
(In my wildest imagination, I can't imagine anyone wanting to use this poorly done sketch for any purpose but if you want to, then remember it is copyrighted. Ask and use) |
My very first full-fledged book ‘Amelia Jane Again by Enid
Blyton’ was gifted by my grandfather when I was around 7 years of age. I must
have read through it some five dozen times.
And then there was no looking back.
So, who/what inspired you to read?