An Ode to a Book Lover
By Kamal Sunavala
I don't know or don't
perhaps remember who said this but
somewhere in one of the many bookshops in Prague I had
chanced upon these words and I paraphrase: All mankind
is a book. When one man dies, the chapter is not over,
it is merely translated. I remember that afternoon perfectly.
I was in one of the alleyways just off Narodni Divadlo.
I remember walking into a bookshop simply because it said rozebrané knihy.
The reason I am writing this is my strange
relationship with a seventy-year old gentleman called Pavel.
He owned
a bookstore in Prague, not in the fashionable parts, but
in Českomoravská. I sat with his son at an airport coffee
shop in Dubai. He was passing through and I went to meet
him while he waited to continue on to Alexandria. Pavel
had requested it, saying I owed him that much for wasting
his time most Friday afternoons. Pavel was my source of
rozebrané knihy. Out of print books. Thanks to
him I own a 100-year-old edition of John Donne. Something
I could
never have found here. Pavel's son, Vítek was on an antiquarian
expedition for books in Egypt and was delighted to meet
with the woman who spent so much time wandering around
his father's near-dilapidated bookstore. Shelves so dusty
it was a wonder my asthma didn't come on. The wood so old,
I could practically see the years of snow embedded deep
into the planks. And cream coloured heavy pages bound in
old smelly leather littered haphazardly while Pavel wrote
letters on an old typewriter to people who were probably
dead.
Vítek asked if we could go to the airport
bookstore and I nearly had a panic attack. I warned him.
He said he was
up to the task. But I knew he was being merely brave. After
about half an hour, I saw a grown man about to cry. Now
you may think I am exaggerating but does pain have to translate
into tears? He asked if people here read at all and I said
yes. What did they read, he asked. New books, I replied.
Popular books, prize winning books, books about poppadums
and flirty girls and Lonely Planet guides and business
books about people who'd like to buy the world a Coke.
We smiled sadly and I patted his hand in sympathy while
we returned to drinking coffee.
What about classics, he pressed on. I assured
him that Magrudy's, the local bookstore chain, had them.
If you
mean Austen and Shakespeare, certainly, we had them. If
you meant Landor and John Donne and C S Lewis and Yeats
and Pepys then you would have to order them. Don't people
browse while they have a cup of coffee and a cigarette,
he asked, as he saw people rushing through books and aisles
and ringing up the bestsellers. I had to suddenly battle
tears as I thought of my time at his father's bookshop
and for that matter even at the Globe with my like-minded
friends. I told him of the time when his father was unwell
and there was a group of American tourists looking for
Bohumil Hrabal and Vladimir Nabokov. And he nudged them toward me. They thought I was the salesgirl in the shop.
To me, that was my most precious memory in the store. I
guided them to the section on the left and then to the
section at the back, which had a few books of Nabokov with
his notes on Lolita. They were amazed and bought all the
copies. As I proudly handed them their purchases, his father
joked and said that if ever his son were to go into an
ugly business which had nothing to do with books, he would
leave his bookshop to me. Vitek smiled at his father's
sense of humour and tears filled his eyes. We sat quietly,
lost in our thoughts. He told me, quickly, regretfully
that the bookshop was no longer functioning. Everyone had
left, for better money, for greener pastures, and the debts
were large.
I wondered how many
such bookshops had met with the same fate. As I looked
at the gleaming Magrudy's, I thought,
why don't horrid 'megastores' like that go out of business?
Why is literature cruel to those who love it? It was
time for Vitek to go.
We hugged and I noticed that he had begun
to smell like his father. He handed me a small package
before he went
out of sight. I tore it open in the cab on my way home.
A first edition of C. S. Lewis' Surprised by Joy.
Thank you, Pavel. Rest in peace, you old, romantic fool.
Read Kamal's Tongue-in-Czech stories
from Prague.
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