Saturday, June 28, 2025
Chasing dreams Catching vibes
Saturday, June 21, 2025
Sapner Boi
Sapner Boi
Sapner Boi
(Dream Book)
I was combing through College Street in the muggy March light of 2015, chasing a ghost—the first-edition set of Srikanta, all four parts, by Sarat Chandra Chattopadhyay.
My quest for old books has always had an air of pilgrimage. As a schoolboy, I had scoured the pavements of Ajmal Khan Road in Karol Bagh, sniffing out dusty treasures. Later, I rummaged through the bookstalls of Gariahat, and even Darjeeling, where musty cartons lay half-forgotten under the misty mountain sun. But College Street—Boi Para, the Mecca of books—that was different. Here, I was chasing both a title and a memory.
It was while turning away from a glossy modern bookstore that I saw it—tucked between a crumbling sweet shop and a digital Xerox centre: a faded stall with a hand-painted board that read: Sapner Boi.
“Dream Book,” I chuckled to myself. It looked anything but dreamy—old wooden shelves sagging under the weight of memory, cloth covers fraying at the edges, and a crooked umbrella keeping out the sun. But something pulled me in.
A bespectacled old man, white-haired and smiling, waved me over.
“Babu, ki khujchen?”
I told him about Srikanta.
He didn’t bother to check the stacks. “Nai,” he said calmly. “But wait…”
From a shelf behind him, he pulled out a treasure: a first edition of Devdas, also by Sarat Chandra. My breath caught. I ran my fingers along its faded cloth spine, the pages yellowed, the type faint.
“I’m Narayan Bose,” he said. “The stall’s mine. Since long before Café Coffee Day came to this lane.”
He gestured to a battered wooden stool. I sat, and stories poured.
I told him about my book-hunting adventures—Ajmal Khan, Gariahat, Darjeeling, even a long-lost Russian novel I’d once found in a tea shop. He laughed and said, “You must be waiting for a magic book to find you.”
Then, almost casually, he pointed to a stack of handmade graphic stories. The covers were plain, stitched with thread. Inside: hand-drawn comics—Tintin in unfamiliar territories, teamed with Feluda, no less. The drawings were meticulous, filled with Bengali wit and a child’s wonder.
“Not for sale,” he said firmly, almost protectively.
Just then, a little whirlwind swept in. A girl of about nine, with oversized spectacles, jeans, a bright yellow top, and a backpack weighed down with imagination. She pulled out a handmade graphic notebook and handed it to Narayan Babu.
“This is Mishka,” he said. “Bengali father, Malayali mother. Shifted from Bangalore recently. Walked in one morning and began sorting my books.”
She glanced up at me, curious but not shy. The notebook she’d brought was a graphic story based on Jayant and Manik, my own childhood favourites by Hemendra Kumar Roy. Her illustrations were detailed, humorous, alive.
“She shares these with kids in the nearby slum,” Narayan Babu added. “And when customers come with children, she keeps them busy with her books. She's... part of the shop now.”
A Decade Later
In May 2025, I was back in College Street to visit my publisher, Abhijan, when I felt an urge—more instinct than intention—to revisit Sapner Boi.
The stall stood there still. The signboard had been repainted but retained its old-world charm. The familiar smell of old paper mingled with the scent of brewed coffee, drifting from a CCD dispenser neatly installed in the corner.
Narayan Bose sat like an aging banyan tree—frail, eyes watery, hands trembling but warm. He remembered me.
“Devdas, 2015,” he said, smiling.
And there stood Mishka, now a young woman—taller, confident, still wearing slightly oversized glasses. The stall had evolved under her care. A small chalkboard listed storytelling sessions every two hours. A few benches and cushions were scattered around, and subtle background music played softly—piano notes, gentle and emotive.
I stayed for the 2 PM session. Mishka began reading from A Gentleman in Moscow. Her voice was steady, lyrical—each sentence spoken like a musical note. As Count Rostov paced the corridors of the Metropol, Satie’s Gymnopédies floated in the background. She had paired the reading with music so perfectly, it felt like watching the novel unfold on an invisible stage.
When she finished, no one moved. The stillness said everything.
I left quietly but not empty-handed. I bought a copy of Keigo Higashino’s The Final Curtain from the shelf—a little something for the flight ahead.
Epilogue
Before leaving for Australia, I had asked Samaranand to stay in touch with Narayan Babu—and, indirectly, with Mishka. I passed along a list of Bengali and English children’s books I wanted him to buy from Sapner Boi from time to time—ostensibly for the books, but really so that Samaranand could keep a gentle eye on her well-being through Babulal and Soumya.
In truth, I had grown fond of her—drawn by her spirit, her imagination, her strange, beautiful world of drawings and dreams.
During my last visit, Narayan Babu shared with quiet pride that Mishka was now studying English Literature, pursuing a B.A. Honours degree.
That little girl who once stitched together Tintin and Feluda in a notebook was now walking steadily into the world of letters—book by book, story by story.
And Sapner Boi, the Dream Book, continued to shelter them both!
Thursday, June 19, 2025
Travelogue: A Chilly, Chuckle-Filled Chase Through Tasmania’s Wilds
Wednesday, June 18, 2025
Winter escape to Brady's Lake in Tasmania
Winter Escape to Brady’s Lake
A mid-June travelogue through Tasmania’s Central Highlands
16 June – Arrival & the Highlands run-up
A dawn Jetstar hop from subtropical Brisbane felt like stepping through a portal: by 10 a.m. we were breathing the sharp maritime air of Hobart. Border bio-security was front-of-mind; beagles padded the carousel ready to dob in a wayward mandarin, so we kept our luggage strictly produce-free. Tip: never bring fruit or veg into Tasmania—declare it or bin it.
Bargain Car Rentals handed over the keys to our SUV (Hertz and Avis kiosks were doing brisk business beside them). After a pit-stop at Coles for bread, biscuits and eggs—and a guilty-pleasure lunch at KFC—we nosed onto the Lyell Highway (A10) bound for Brady’s Lake, 68 km northwest of Hamilton and roughly 125 km from Hobart airport.
Almost immediately the city fell away to emerald paddocks stitched with split-rail fences. Sheep browsed like scattered cumulus against the vivid winter grass; skeins of mist hung in folds of the Derwent Valley. We dialled the radio to 7HOFM 101.7 FM—Hobart’s oldest commercial station—whose breakfast crew bounced between traffic updates, dad jokes and a string of 80s sing-alongs. Windows fogged from our steaming takeaway coffee; outside, the dashboard read a brisk 9 °C.
Through Ouse & the high country
Ninety minutes on, we rolled into the hamlet of Ouse for caffeine and a stretch before tackling the climb. From here the highway kinks north-west, threading between brooding dolerite ridges and the skeletal ash forests of the Central Plateau Conservation Area. Yellow road signs warned of “WALLABIES NEXT 20 km” and “ICE SKID RISK”—they weren’t kidding. Frost ribbons glazed the bitumen in shaded gullies; Anish kept a white-knuckle 80 km/h while 7HOFM segued into Crowded House and weather bulletins that promised “snow showers above 900 metres”.
Past Tarraleah we left the main drag, skirting Lake Binney and braking for the first of many wallabies darting through dusk. At 4:30 p.m.—sun already kissing the treetops—we spotted the hand-painted road sign “Hakuna Matata”: our little cedar-clad haven on Brady’s shore.
Inside, a crackling log fire thawed our runny noses. The aroma of burning eucalyptus oil and resin lent the living room an old-world warmth electric heaters can’t imitate. Through picture windows the lake spread like pewter, ringed by ghostly stumps left by Hydro-Tasmania’s 1950s inundation. Outside it was 6 °C with an icy breeze; inside, the glow of red coals and the hum of electric under-blankets promised perfect hibernation.
17 June – A day by the water
Morning rain drummed softly on the iron roof, pushing wisps of cloud across the lake’s glassy surface. We circled the foreshore on a mossy track strewn with quartz pebbles and pencil pine cones. At ~661 m elevation Bradys sits on a saddle between the Nive River and Bronte Lagoon; the three linked reservoirs form the headworks for Tungatinah Power Station far below.
Even muted by drizzle the landscape dazzled: teal water flecked with black swans, jade eucalypt slopes rising behind tawny tussock meadows, and absolute silence broken only by a ravens’ croak. The absence of neighbours was startling for us Indians accustomed to chai-stall chatter on every corner; here, “crowd” meant a pair of paddlers skimming across the chain of lakes.
Afternoon sent us indoors, where the fire’s amber light danced on Tasmanian oak floorboards. Rain rattled the windows while we dozed under woollen throws and grazed on toast, cheese and ABC evening news—winter hygge Down Under.
18 June – Night drive & homeward bound
Alarms chimed at 04:00. Outside, Orion blazed over the inky water; breath plumed like smoke. The SUV headlights cut a tunnel through the Highlands as Anish eased back onto the highway. In the beams, wallabies, pademelons and an occasional brush-tailed possum bounded like pinballs—an ever-shifting slalom that kept speeds modest. A ghost-white masked owl swooped low, its wings briefly filling the windshield before vanishing.
We’d planned another coffee at Ouse, but the lone roadside café’s veranda lights were dark—winter hours, or maybe just Tuesday. Instead we let the radio keep us alert: 7HOFM’s pre-dawn announcer traded calls with long-haul truckies while Taylor Swift and INXS alternated in the playlist. As the first peach glow touched Mount Wellington, Hobart’s lights unfurled below and the airport loomed, country stillness giving way to jet-bridges and boarding calls.
Brady’s Lake in a nutshell
Feature | Detail |
---|---|
Latitude / Longitude | 42° 13′ 48″ S, 146° 29′ 24″ E |
Elevation | ~661 m (2 169 ft) above sea level |
Origin | Impounded section of the Nive River, created 1950s for Hydro-Tasmania power scheme |
Landscape palette | Dolerite hills, dry-sclerophyll eucalypt forest, button-grass plains and glacier-scraped lagoons |
Wildlife highlights | Platypus in quiet bays; wedge-tailed eagles over the ridges; abundant nocturnal marsupials |
Human footprint | A string of no-frills shacks and the odd Airbnb—otherwise, an amphitheatre of silence |
Final thoughts
Brady’s Lake pairs the raw minimalism of Tasmania’s Central Highlands with the cosy romance of a pot-bellied stove. In three short days we tasted both: broad-sky meadows and silvered peaks by afternoon; wool socks, woodsmoke and family stories by night. The Highlands road may demand caution—black ice, bounding wallabies, and radio banter your only companions—but reach the water before the early winter sunset and you’ll understand why our son chose to stake a claim here. It’s an oasis where Hakuna Matata isn’t just a signpost; it’s a state of mind.
Monday, June 16, 2025
The Ghostly Ride Through Calcutta's Past
Wednesday, June 11, 2025
The Invisible Boundary: When the Moral Compass Begins to Haunt
Every human being carries within them an invisible boundary — a silent perimeter set not by society or law, but by the self. It is the subtle edge of the moral compass, unconsciously drawn through values, upbringing, and lived experience. We don’t always notice when we cross it — but when we do, even unknowingly, it often begins to haunt us in ways we never anticipated.
In the bustle of daily life, caught up in work, ambition, and survival, we often overlook the quiet needs of those around us. Our routines make us efficient, but not always empathetic. There may come a day when we give money to a stranger who is starving — a gesture of kindness — but in that moment, we might suddenly remember the time we ignored a friend in distress, or failed to support an ageing relative. The guilt that arises isn't about the current act of charity; it stems from a deeper regret — of having once missed a chance to care when it truly mattered.
Such moments of reflection don’t follow a schedule. They arrive uninvited, sometimes years later, triggered by something as simple as a street scene or a film. One such film, The Father, left a profound impact on me. Anthony Hopkins, in a hauntingly beautiful performance, portrays an elderly man slipping into the fog of dementia. His daughter, played by Olivia Colman, struggles to care for him — torn between love, exhaustion, and the hard realities of life. What the film so brilliantly captures is not just the disintegration of memory, but the quiet moral conflict of the caregiver. The guilt of not being able to do enough. The regret of losing patience. The ache of witnessing a loved one fade away, and the helplessness of watching yourself withdraw emotionally in response.
This story is not uncommon. Many aging parents, who once sacrificed everything for their children, now find themselves alone — sometimes placed in old age homes. The decision may be driven by practical constraints, but later, when life slows down, it can stir deep guilt. Memories return unbidden: of their silent sacrifices, the uncomplaining way they gave up comforts for our sake, the joy they felt in our smallest successes. And we wonder — could we not have done more?
These aren’t isolated emotions. They are shared by many who, in their earnest chase of personal goals, overlooked the human connections that truly mattered. Yet, guilt, for all its weight, is not entirely a curse. It is the soul’s way of nudging us toward reflection. It makes us human. It tells us that our conscience is still alive — tender, questioning, and capable of growth.
Conclusion
Life is noisy, and its demands never truly end. But somewhere between the appointments and obligations, we must pause to check in — not just with others, but with ourselves. The invisible boundary of our moral compass, though unseen, is felt. When we cross it, something inside us shifts. And while guilt may come later, like an echo from the past, it also offers a second chance — to reconnect, to redeem, and to realign.
Let us strive to be present, now — while there is still time. Let us not wait for regret to remind us of our humanity.