Bond shares this secret in his new book "Till the Clouds Roll by, Beginning Again", which is a story about his life when he was 10-years-old and coming to Dehradun for his winter holidays, a few months after his father had been taken from him by "death's dark angel".
The book, published by Puffin, is a sequel to "Looking for the Rainbow, My Years with Daddy" and captures Bond's growing up years where he is seen dealing with the loss of his father, reacquainting himself with his mother who now has a new husband and discovering his love for books.
According to Bond, his father;s sudden death precipitated him into a different and unfamiliar world.
"The transition from an English father to a Punjabi stepfather demanded an adjustment that was far from easy for a 10-year-old boy who had just lost his father. When I came down to Dehradun from my hill school, it was to a home that had yet to become a home. This is the story of that winter holiday over seventy years ago. To me it seems like yesterday.
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"The remaining door swung open at my touch to reveal a treasure trove of books - books that were in good condition because they hadn't been touched for years, the collection of some bygone forest officer perhaps," he says.
"Here I found enough reading to keep me occupied for the rest of the week. Here I discovered the ghost stories of M R James, that master of the supernatural tale, scholarly and convincing. Here I discovered an early P G Wodehouse novel, 'Love among the Chickens', featuring Ukridge that happy optimist, who was to become my favourite Wodehouse character," he says.
"There were some children's books in that cupboard too and I have to confess that I read very few children's books as a boy. I had gone straight from comic papers to adult fiction," he says.
The front veranda of the bungalow had a very comfortable armchair, and Bond spent most of the day stretched out in it with one of those books for company.
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