Kunal Bhattacharya is a dynamo of a kid I met in Bookline
one day just by chance. We struck up a conversation and I was immediately
impressed by the maturity in him. He was silent and he was listening, while me
being me, I was blabbering.
Since that day, Kunal and I have struck up an uncommonly
rewarding friendship, whereupon he and I talk on a regular basis and have been
moderating rooms on Clubhouse on weekends.
Why should you care about Kunal? Let me show you something
he wrote back in the day, that he nervously shared with me via WhatsApp. Let
him speak, and let me step aside.
The Bilge Master
If there is one place that has shaped my childhood and made me into who I
am today it would be the Florence Library in Alabama USA. I remember how my mom
would drive me to the Library every Saturday and Sunday in our beat-up Plymouth
Voyager. It was my only real source of entertainment since my dad was a
struggling student and couldn’t afford a TV or a cable connection and our
neighbourhood wasn’t the best for making friends, especially for a scrawny
Asian kid who looked like a white boy.
The library was a magical place for me. You think you know the beauty of a
library, but let me tell you that no library in India that I have visited can
even hold a candle to Florence Library .
The entire library floor was coved with carpets and for my 4-year-old self
the shelves seemed impossibly tall. There was a special smell around the place,
a smell that made you feel like this was where you truly belonged. My favourite
part however, was the reading corner. There were massive indoor trees
(artificial as I would later realise) under which were beanbags of every colour
of the rainbow. They were a collage of greens, blues and reds which may seem
garish to the eyes of an adult but to my 4-year-old self it was simply perfect.
I would sit under the warm yellow light that the library seemed to be
suffused with and lose myself in the world of Franklin the Turtle, Green Eggs
and Ham and Bob the Builder.
When it was finally time to leave, I would beg my mother for just a few
more minutes, clinging to her legs and crying. Sometimes she would give in and
we would spend another few minutes that would turn into hours in that book
filled utopia.
My love of books can be traced back to those hours spent in the library
every weekend for 5 years. It must also be said that without my mother I
probably would never have gotten into reading. While she had a hundred other
things to do, she would always make time to drop me at the library every
weekend. She would borrow 15 books every week from the library (the librarian
undoubtedly bent a few rules to allow us to borrow that many) and over the week
would read to me during breakfast, my evening soft boiled egg, dinner and right
before bed. At that point my mom was pretty much supporting our family all
alone since my dad would be in college most of the day. My mother still found
the time to read to me.
These daily sessions were undoubtedly where my bibliophile tendencies
sprung from and they hold a special place in my heart. One of my greatest
wishes is for me to one day be able to visit Florence Library again for it is a
place of a thousand stories and where my story began.
Wonderful narrative. Enjoyed it thoroughly.
ReplyDeleteWonderful ✨ you earned my respect and I appreciate your work π
ReplyDeleteHi Ashesh, this is Kunal's mother. Thank you for publishing this and encouraging him to write.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful and so well written. Thank you for letting us know your own story in a place where thousands of stories abide. Bless you and goodluck to you always π
ReplyDeleteLoved itπ€
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot for sharing. GOD BLESS .
ReplyDeleteWritten beautifully
ReplyDelete