To me, reading is not an act of nervous ticking multimedianess, nor a hashtag to-do list, but going into my mental dappled afternoon zone. I slow down. I revolt against this act of reflection being turned into a samosa snack.
For, wasn’t the charm of real world browsing all about leaving with something completely different from whatever you may have walked in looking for? A combination of the bookseller who knew your tastes, some chit-chat, lazy categorisation and books lying randomly around – leading to delightful discoveries.
A pleasure that is now being hijacked by this GPS like convenience of perfect slotting. Each one yelling, choose me, choose me, in a suddenly only one-way conversation. I was walking around such a bookstore the other day when I realised that I felt… nothing. Waves of categories winged past me like jets in a video game, and I exited the store to breathe.
One of my favourite modern philosopher’s – Paul Virilio - words came back to me. Contact but no contact.
So, here’s how book categories in today’s bookshops could easily be re-labelled.
Bestsellers: Books you can read as movies.
Biographies: 90% bad guys. 10% world changers. Hitler, always available.
Books on sale: Proofing and printing error copies.
Children: Books that grown-ups lovingly buy for kids to teach them values they forget to practise themselves.
Crime: Stories which kill. Your nails.
Drama: Check the movies section.
Education: Dummy guides to mugging.
Fiction: Spun a yarn, somebody got hurt, some awards happened.
Graphic Novels: Dank existential sketches with a head but no tale, and other arty mini-movies.
Horror: From ha to bwahahaha in that blackish green tint.
Indian literature: Indians writing and getting published.
Myth & History: Unlikely place in India where these sections actually talk to each other.
Non-fiction: Somebody else paid the writer’s bills.
New Arrivals: Buy me, I have industry pressure.
Professional: How to do a multi-million dollar anything.
Poetry: Neruda, Tagore, and anthologies of other forgotten folk.
Queer: Love, interrupted.
Romance: Ishq-kiya. Enter ex, sex or self-pity.
Science & Technology: For those who get it.
Self-help: I'm screwed and no one gets it, not even me.
Spirituality: Books picked up on bad days by those who diss real spiritual practises.
Sport: Books not written by the best sports columnists.
Translations: Great books in languages you don’t know, loser!
Travel: Guides to the postmodern epidemic of somewherelseitis.
And a section which doesn't exist, but should, with an entirely appropriate exclamation mark: Oh! I saw this author at that lit-fest.