Abids
on Sunday the 22nd of July 2018 was nice and cool. This was a postponed visit actually. I had arranged to meet Susheel at Abids the
previous Sunday, but the two ladies at home had made some other plan. I didn’t know their plan earlier; I hadn’t told
them of my Abids plan. I went along with
the ladies since it was a lunch plan.
And
here I was, at Abids, at 11 in the morning. Susheel said he was on his way. I did some b(l)ooking around and found a book
that I wanted to buy. It was in fairly
good shape, but I thought I’d come around one more time and see. I didn’t want to show too much interest. I saw Umashankar first; then Vinod
arrived. After some initial browsing, Umashankar,
Vinod, and I went to the Irani hotel for chai.
Then Susheel called and said he’d reached Abids. Vinod and Uma went inside the café and there
was another friend of theirs along with them.
I waited outside for Susheel, and then we had chai. I was meeting Susheel after years. He is my oldest friend in Hyderabad, going
back to 1991. He recently converted to
fountainpenism and that was an added topic that we talk about on chat
machines.
Anyway,
Vinod and Umashankar were still at the Irani sipping tea and chatting. I told Vinod that I’d be moving ahead with
Susheel. Susheel and I went around
seeing books and talking, but not finding anything. I was wondering if I’d get anything today at
all. We went inside the complex, there
were heaps of books. Susheel went
through a stack of comics, then he found some Manga comics. But he didn’t pick up any. I saw another book which I thought I should
pick up, but let it lie.
We came out of
the complex from the other side and rounded back to the beginning of Bata
galli. There was 20 rupees pile there
and I had found some books there earlier. In this pile I found my first Ross
Macdonald-Lew Archer novel at Abids so far… a Lew Archer novel that I hadn’t read
yet, that too for 20 rupees. I was ecstatic,
but didn’t show it much. The
Doomsters was the last Lew Archer novel on my list and after searching
for a long time, I settled for an omnibus edition (Archer in Jeopardy) with
this novel and two more Lew Archer novels.
The omnibus edition was purchased more for its antiquarian value, so
this copy at Abids was very gratefully accepted.
After
that I saw Susheel off, and resumed my search.
I thought I’d see if those two books that I was interested in earlier
were still there. One was there …
waiting. When I saw Cross Channel by Julian
Barnes on that pile, I was not sure … I had read Julian Barnes’ The
Sense of an Ending recently, and on the back of it, had purchased Arthur
& George and The Noise of Time. I had started reading Arthur & George, and
I was on a Julian Barnes trip
anyway. I knew that Cross Channel is not a
novel, because I hadn’t seen the book on the list of novels by Barnes, so
I thought it’d be a book of essays when I saw it on the pavement at Abids. Now I picked it up and read what was written
on the back cover and realized that it is a book of short stories. I didn’t hesitate, I picked the book up for
30 rupees.
I
had seen Keigo Higashino’s Naoko very early on on Sunday, but hadn’t
picked it up. I am a big fan of
Higashino’s novels, and when I saw Naoko at Abids, my eyebrows shot up. For one, I have been seeing this same edition
on amazon, and the price was high for me.
I also felt that this was an overseas edition not yet available for sale
in Indian shops, so I was also surprised that this book found its way to Abids. Anyway, I was pleased that I found it. I asked how much, he said 60, I said 30, he
said 40, I said done.
And this time at Abids I got three books by
three authors whose books I had read earlier and enjoyed and appreciated. All for 90 rupees only. This sort of thing doesn’t happen often at
Abids.
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