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Friday, January 30, 2026

Book Fair

I was in Kolkata for three days, and visited the Book Fair after ages. Well, close to two decades, I should think. It was a leisurely jaunt on a balmy winter weekday afternoon.

I had worked as a volunteer at the stall of a little magazine called Proma (headed by the engineer-poet Surojit Ghosh, who was an insider in the city's literary/intellectual circle in the '80s) from 1980 (the fourth fair: this year it was the 49th, and Surojit-da is long dead!) to 1987. Then there was a big gap, and I visited again with wife and daughter after it had been shifted to the Milon Mela grounds next to Science City. By that time, it seemed to me, it had morphed into a food fair more than a Book Fair, though the Publishers' and Booksellers' Guild happily released figures about soaring sales year on year. And it had become too noisy, crowded and dusty. So I stopped going. In any case, I was busy making a living, and where books were concerned, I was spoilt for choice, what with so many old boys and girls constantly supplying me with reading material, my daughter foremost among them, besides Amazon. I had lost the taste, apparently, just as it had happened with going to the cinema. This year, I went because Pupu and Swarnava cajoled me along.

As every Bengali knows, the fairgrounds have shifted again, to Salt Lake this time. The visit brought back many memories, a sense of loss and a deepening of the feeling that our times are gone. The fair is much bigger now, much tidier in a way, with all kinds of stalls selling things which have little to do with books, from the National Jute Board to people who want to talk to farmers about fertilizers to a welter of recently born private universities. I visited the Proma stall, which was a tiny ghost of its former self, and the only gentleman running the show was at sea when I tried talking to him about days past and people whom I had worked with (wow, I silently reflected, the 'hot babes' I had worked alongside would be past sixty now!). I had promised myself to visit the Guruchandali stall, and had a nice chat with the founder/owner Saikat Banerjee. I was tickled to find that the Bangla Poksho stall, whose helmsmen were loudly berating the BJP government's anti-Bengali agenda, was located right next to the BJP's own stall - which was deserted! Do listen to these people on YouTube, those of my readers whose Bengali blood has still not been too polluted by influences from the cow belt. I liked the beautiful display of heritage publications set up by the state government, with Parvathi baul playing softly in the background. And I deliberately gave the big stalls like Family Book Shop, Ananda and Dey's a miss, because they were claustrophobically crowded, and could only offer books I can easily find elsewhere and more cheaply. P and S bought a small mountain of books anyway. Snacking at Saha Confectionery was fun, because their banner said 'Boi kinley kshidey paye' (buying books is hungry work)! Smoking on the fairgrounds is strictly prohibited, which I suppose is a good thing (though they could have put up a few few paid smokers' corners), and the enormous police presence made me wonder: were they expecting a large scale terrorist attack or a riot?

Riding an Uber cab home, I knew I was feeling tired and a little lost. I have never been able to like Calcutta, and now it has left me behind. Much more wealthy since the days of my youth, of course, maybe a little cleaner and greener too, but certainly not my city any more, in any sense, if it ever was. That is probably why I zoom into my daughter's house, laze and luxuriate for a few days, and then zoom back home, despite so many people telling me to visit them when I am in town. If Pupu had not been living there, I cannot think of a single reason why I should ever want to visit again. And that applies to New York as well... but it was good to see that in this city of festivals, the Book Fair has struck deep roots as another one of them. May it grow and prosper.



6 comments:

Aditya Mishra said...

Dear Sir,

I am happy to read a new blog post after refreshing this page at least 2–3 times a day. Also, glad to know that you have good company in Kolkata, a refuge in an otherwise heartless Indian city.

I skipped the Bhubaneswar Book Fairs in 2025 and the one at the beginning of 2026. One reason was the pile of unread books I have from my previous visits, and the other was how long it takes me to get from my place to the heart of the city. It takes up a good part of my time, and then reaching back home in time is another task altogether. Auto-wallahs or bike taxi drivers would not hesitate to demand that their names be added to a will or trust. That is how eager they are to fleece people on my route once the last city bus is missed. If the roads were any better, which they will be in a matter of months, I would prefer to walk those 3–4 kms. I just need to learn to be invisible to dogs. They do not like me. Not the ones in Amritsar or Ranchi or Bhubaneswar. It seems a secret pact has been signed and distributed across Indian cities to terrorise me each time I step out.

Another reason, which does not bother me that much, and as you have noticed, is the food stalls. We are a nation of gluttons and have a strong compulsion to snack continuously. That shows up in these fairs, too. One good thing about the book fairs here is the absence of political stalls. That alone makes the visit slightly more pleasant.

During my previous visits, I have only ever purchased old books. I like owning books that have passed through multiple hands. If I am lucky, I find a scribbled note here, a postcard there, or just some simple underlining. Some books were gifts to someone, while other copies were filched from some library. I often wonder about the journey of these old books I buy before getting engrossed in their content. Maybe its owner was a doctor who turned its pages during night shifts, or a college student who treated it as an escape from boring lectures, or a housewife who could never quite get to the end of the book due to being bogged down by this work or that chore. And finally, it ends with me, after making its journey on a pickup truck from some shop tucked away in one busy corner in 'Boi Para' of College Street. Nobody adopted it there, and it had to travel a few hundred miles, where I had to sift through tens of books before I decided that its slightly torn and creased jacket or musty smell of its slow death and decay did not bother me, nor did the markings of its previous owner, and certainly not the Rs 50 price tag.

Part 1

Aditya Mishra said...

Part I contd.

Right now, that book, along with the friends it has made in my house, lies in some corner gathering dust. Plato probably has spirited discussions with Orwell. Bored with that, Ruskin Bond and Vikram Seth confess their boarding school mischiefs to each other. Kafka, sandwiched between them, anxious and pensive, wonders and murmurs about vague topics, while Camus derides them all for their futile attempts at picking out meaning from mundane things. And below all of this, Griffiths, Zemansky, and Goldstein wonder why I have not thought about them for a while. Or maybe they have forgotten me, too. Yes, it must be so!

Hopefully, these books are now my prisoners, serving a life sentence. I do not want them to end in a pair of cold hands that would fix their minor imperfections-the scars from their previous lives-or straighten out decades-old dog-ears that meant something to someone, or dust them every day. I do not want to release them into the world where they will end up in a taped-up soybean oil carton with strangers, only to be picked, tossed, and discarded again by apathetic hands. They have travelled well and enough and must rest now.

Pardon the digression, sir.
Like most of my comments, which are an extension of my thoughts, this went completely haywire and onto a completely arbitrary tangent unrelated to the post.

I am happy that people, although increasingly few, still read, or at least pretend to do so. May readers find good books, and may writers get the audience they deserve, and not the ones that treat it as another social media post. We have all seen what happens in Faqir Chand, Delhi.

I am quite surprised to see Swarnava so eager to move about. Back in college, it was difficult to get him to walk a few meters post dinner. I am glad to see that it has changed. Antariksha, a mutual friend, and I always joked that it was easier to find signs of intelligent life in some faraway planetary system than for Swarnava to consider us worthy enough for a few precious minutes of his time. The response was always “Nehi” or “Today’s lunch, dinner, or snacks did not agree with his bowels.” I hope he's not parroting the same phrases now!

I guess this comment has become too long already, and I must stop before you, or your readers, lose any interest in this.
Looking forward to your next post.

Best regards,
Aditya Mishra

Rajdeep said...

This reads like a quiet reckoning rather than a fair report—a city remembered, a city that no longer remembers. The “tiny ghost” of Proma says more about time and loss than pages of nostalgia ever could. I liked the clear-eyed refusal to sentimentalise the fair: the noise, crowds and politics offset by small, human consolations—music drifting in, unintended ironies, the hunger that follows books. The ending lands hard and true: the fair endures as a festival even as the city slips away, held now only through your daughter. Spare, unsparing, and deeply felt.I can understand how you feel. And I haven't been to a book fair for several decades now. I prefer libraries.

Rajdeep said...

Nice to see your lovely smiles! Pupu found her own bookstall?!!!

Suvro Chatterjee said...

Nice attitude to old books, Aditya. And yes, Swarnava does seem to have changed a bit, hasn't he? Rajdeep, yes, I did heave a deep sigh, though it wasn't a bad experience overall. As for that stall, no connection with my daughter at all, but I couldn't resist the temptation!

Tanmoy said...

Dear Suvroda - I am so glad that you visited Book Fair. I know it has changed but I still miss it. Probably last time I went was in 2001.

Regards
Tanmoy