Indian Review of Books, or IRB, was, from 1992 to August 2001, one of the better loved of Indian literary magazines. Its demise was mourned by many, including the author Shashi Tharoor: "India's best literary journal had finally been defeated by the hard mathematics of the market."
The IRB encouraged almost as much conversation between its sometimes formidable contributors as Twitter and Facebook combined, and some of its insouciance was reflected in the tag line that ran under the masthead: "Koi Hai? Bilaytee Pani Lao." A young author and contributor from Shimla by the name of Pankaj Mishra offered enthusiastic suggestions, in a letter to the editors: "The cover doesn't necessarily have to relate to any of the contents, does it? You could make it a forum for budding artists."
K S Padmanabhan, the gentle, incisive, steadfastly courteous founder of the IRB, died this weekend, at the age of 77. His passing made me think of what it means to have a life in books. By today's frighteningly narrow, market-driven definitions, a successful author measures his or her success exclusively by book sales, reach and the number of followers. But what of the life of the successful reader?
When I met Padmanabhan, I expected to meet a man who took himself very seriously. He had been a publisher for decades, aside from being one of the founders of the IRB and the Madras Book Club, along with S Muthiah.
He didn't see himself as a legend. Instead, Padmanabhan saw himself as a reader, and talked of books and authors and what they had meant to him, of the old bookshops of Chennai and people in the trade. Books ran in the family's bloodstream; his wife, Chandra, is an acclaimed cookbook writer, and his son, Gautam, now runs Westland-Tranquebar. His life, lived among books, and editors, and writers, was a rich and full one.
Literary journals - Biblio, The Book Review, IRB, Seminar, and before them perhaps Quest or Modern Review or Mookerjee's Magazine - are our memory keepers, in the absence of more than one or two literary histories. But the copies of the IRB on sale that day were pulped beyond the possibility of salvage. I could not turn their pages, and with regret, I left without them.
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The sudden and early death of the sociologist Sharmila Rege last week came just after she had published a significant collection of B R Ambedkar's writings, Against the Madness of Manu (Navayana). The impression that the leaders of India's national movement read, and wrote, their way into being has stayed with me for a long time.
Ambedkar came to reading at a very early age, borrowing books from teachers, reading voraciously, shaping himself into a writer of precision and clarity. On an early trip to New York, Ambedkar ransacked second-hand bookstores, buying books in the hundreds; at the time of his death, his personal library ran to over 50,000 volumes.
The barriers of caste shadowed his early life. In Baroda, he lived in discomfort, pretending to be a Parsi because untouchables were often denied accommodation. Of that time, Ambedkar wrote: "In the absence of the company of human beings I sought the company of books, and read and read. Absorbed in reading, I forgot my lonely condition. But the chirping and flying about of the bats … sent cold shivers through me - reminding me of what I was endeavouring to forget, that I was in a strange place under strange conditions."
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Like B R Ambedkar, Sharmila Rege, and K S Padmanabhan, those who are shaped by books take it for granted that their reading will run parallel to their lives.
In his memoir of Patna - A Matter of Rats - the writer, critic and teacher Amitava Kumar sets out to remember a city. The journalist in Mr Kumar sends him out in search of the rats who infest the city, creeping into his earliest memories, and in search of the Musahar families who catch and eat them. As he writes, he recalls Phanishwar Nath Renu's memoir about doing relief work during the flood of 1949. Like the great author, Mr Kumar writes, "I would sometimes find joy amongst those I had expected only to be burdened by pathos."
Mr Kumar captures, in quick precise Kodak scenes, Patna's past, its quirkier legacies - Napoleon's bed, the Patna Qalam school and Lalu Prasad stories. But then he comes home: "As I grew older and found my footing as a writer, I looked for Patna in literature." His city rests in the keeping of Ramdhari Singh Dinkar, Baba Nagarjun, Siddharth Chowdhury, Ian Jack, Arun Prakash, Shiva Naipaul, and, eventually, in his own books. Towards the end of this searching, colourful, honest city memoir, Mr Kumar writes, "Patna for me will always be about parents and children."
This is accurate, for A Matter of Rats is a family memoir. Mr Kumar has already evoked the family of writers that surrounds those who live interleaved lives - the ordinary world, and on the facing page, the world of books.
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