Online edition of India's National Newspaper
Thursday, Apr 10, 2008
Google



Metro Plus Kochi
Published on Mondays & Thursdays

Features: Magazine | Literary Review | Life | Metro Plus | Open Page | Education Plus | Book Review | Business | SciTech | NXg | Friday Review | Cinema Plus | Young World | Property Plus | Quest | Folio |

Metro Plus    Bangalore    Chennai    Coimbatore    Delhi    Hyderabad    Kochi   

Printer Friendly Page Send this Article to a Friend

World in a nook

Pastime A cheery reading spot is a personal sanctuary for some people



Passionate pastime Unwind with a book

With the bedside lamp tunnelling its light onto the page, Chandrasekar, a bibliophile, reads and reads. And reads some more. Greying at the temples and prosperous around the hips, he seats himself propped by pillows. The paintings and frescos in soft colours in the room glow in the diffused spread of auburn light. Nearby, an eclectic mix of fiction and poetry, science fiction and biographies, religion and philosophy, fill the shelves. “Its my world within the world.”

Small places, big worlds

Gangadhar, a youngster with a craze for Stephen Covey kind of books, has a ritual of reading. He lies down on the bed and holds the book on his chest and feels its weight grow. In time, he brings the book in line with the floor, edging his neck out of the bed. Newton’s gravitation pulls his head down causing a slight disorientation, if not an outright blackout. He turns back, keeping the book on his chest.

Then back again. “I like reading in bed,” he says. “When I am in the bedroom, I can close the door, block out the noise of TV,” he adds. Moreover, the spot associated with reading makes you get into the right frame of mind to read. “Yeah, definitely. The setting, the cushy chair is important,” says Harish. K.

For outdoor persons, reading spots could be anywhere they can land their eyes on the book. Mounika, a management student, says: “I like to read in the garden, a garden filled with roses and jasmines.” With a sweet smell wafting through, she launches herself into novels, “which can teach us how characters work and how they manage their lives.”

Vishnu, an executive who travels a lot by train, shares his experience: “As soon as I get into a train, I go to the window side. The view outside of the fields, the cattle, the hills, blur past with a little rollicking movement of the wagon. With a book to read, I feel at home wherever I am.”

Personal and personalized, these reading spots lend themselves to intimacy and affinity.

G.B.S.N.P. VARMA

Printer friendly page  
Send this article to Friends by E-Mail



Metro Plus    Bangalore    Chennai    Coimbatore    Delhi    Hyderabad    Kochi   

Features: Magazine | Literary Review | Life | Metro Plus | Open Page | Education Plus | Book Review | Business | SciTech | NXg | Friday Review | Cinema Plus | Young World | Property Plus | Quest | Folio |


The Hindu Group: Home | About Us | Copyright | Archives | Contacts | Subscription
Group Sites: The Hindu | Business Line | Sportstar | Frontline | Publications | eBooks | Images | Home |

Comments to : thehindu@vsnl.com   Copyright © 2008, The Hindu
Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu