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The Great Book Bazaar
From students to artists to
designers to theorists to activists- Daryaganj is the favourite place to
be on a Sunday. Life has been beginning here at 7 am every Sunday, over
the decades for its thriving old Book bazaar. This book bazaar is
paradise for book lovers all over Delhi and beyond as a mind-boggling
variety of rare books are usually available in this market at very
affordable prices.
by REPORTER@DAYAFTERINDIA.COM
Today
after so many centuries, Daryaganj is still a market but now an over
populated busy and congested one. Now it has the office of some of the
most well known distributors, publication houses and organizations of
the country apart from the good Indian restaurants and shop selling
different kinds of them. Near Daryaganj’s Golcha cinema, the bazaar is
the only source of income for many of its 200 pavement booksellers. The
books sold in this bazaar are mostly second hand. However, that does
nothing to the quality of the reading material available. You have
everything; from fiction to medical sciences; architecture to cookery
books, comics to atlases ; fiction to computers; classics to magazines;
management to hobbies, you name it and this place has it. It is hard to
classify the books here in a specific order but a patient search will
certainly yield in what you are looking for. Whether it is a book on
cooking, computer engineering or a book by Charles Dickens, Shakespeare,
Premchand and Sharad Chand, Ravinder Nath Tagore they have it all at
dirt cheap rates.
The customers are of all ages and
sizes, with college students comprising the majority. A student
preparing for his MCA entrance comes all the way from south-Delhi to buy
books. A group of architecture students look for journals and magazines
on design and planning, which are very expensive at regular bookstores.
“I am a literature student and must read a lot. However, I cannot afford
to buy brand new books all the time. So I regularly come here or visit
the corner book shop at Mithas,” confides a young customer.
Mr. Suresh, the owner, sells all kinds
of books. “I generally buy books from the publishing companies
themselves, and at times from distributors. The source is not important
as long as the books are good” says Suresh. “I also collect books by
exchange. Many foreigners buy books here which they read and do not
necessarily want to carry back. If we like their books, we take two of
their books and give them one book of their choice in return.
Many book-lovers who throng the weekly
market at Darya Ganj were recently surprised to see books once presented
to Prime Ministers by their authors being sold on the pavements. Though
a majority of them are those presented to Atal Bihari Vajpayee, one can
also find books given to V. P. Singh, Chandra Shekhar, Rajiv Gandhi, P.
V. Narasimha Rao and Deve Gowda. “You can also find historical and rare
books in this market. The other day, I sold a book which was presented
to the first Prime Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru” said the another
bookseller.
According to Mr. Subhash Chand Agrawal,
President, Sunday book bazaar Patri Welfare Association, the market has
been a Sunday feature in the area for the past three decades. Not all
books here are second-hand. The sellers acquire books from different
places. Many publishers, not able to sell the old editions of books,
sell them to these pavement booksellers at cheaper prices. Also, loads
of books remain unclaimed during transportation through trains and buses
which are then auctioned by Railway and other transportation
authorities. However, according to one bookseller, Ram Nath, “books also
come from distributors on Ansari Road “. Often, customers with old books
lying at home come to sell them to these sellers. The sellers also sell
in bulk acting as distributors themselves. Traders dealing in used books
come from as far away as Hyderabad to buy their stock here.
What do these book-dealers do during
the rest of the week? Some of them have small bookshops while others
spend the week preparing for the following Sunday. According to Mr.
Gupta, “buying books at good prices from different sources is a
time-consuming task requiring business acumen and networking skills”.
During the week, they also deliver books to various individuals or other
sellers within their business network.
As always, authorization of the market
is a messy question. On the one hand, the market is quite established
and its struggle for existence and recognition seems to be long over,
but on the other, each hawker still pays Rs. 200 per month to the police
for “protection”. This is an unofficial arrangement, confides Anjaan,
which keeps both the sides satisfied.
Kumar is categorical about not dealing
in pirated books: “I sell an original version for Rs. 150 after buying
it for Rs.100; the pirated version of the same would cost me Rs.20 and I
would sell it for Rs.50. The profit I make remains the same. So why
should I sell pirated stuff and run the risk of getting into trouble.”
Why would someone buy books from here?
Obviously they are cheaper. Equally importantly, says Mr.Gupta, some
books which are difficult to find in usual bookstores are easily
available here because they are taken off the shelves by publishers due
to little demand. While the cost of the books depends on one’s
bargaining capacity, many can be purchased for as low a price as Rs.10.
Is not just books in English, you will find Urdu, Arabic, and Hindi by
the cartload. Plus, all those foreign language books discarded by
tourists also find their way here. |