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This Article is From Jan 20, 2021

How India’s Independent Bookstores Survived The Pandemic

How India’s Independent Bookstores Survived The Pandemic
The Bookshop in Jor Bagh. (Courtesy Kanishka Gupta)

Ajit Vikram Singh, founder of Delhi's iconic Fact and Fiction, which shut down five years ago eloquently described in this piece how we feel when bookstores close: “…we see a deluge of nostalgia flooding our social media timelines. The feeling of heartbrokenness remains for a few days, like a waterlogged road in Delhi during the monsoon, and then it clears away. While we may not know when the pandemic will end…the future of bookshops will essentially depend on how much we really want them.”

Reading this made me squirm with guilt and realise that I couldn't write this piece until I had visited my favourite Bangalore bookstore for the first time during the pandemic.

We were meeting after almost a year but Bookworm's owner Krishna Gowda recognised me through my mask and gently offered his condolences for a death in our family. Luckily, his other regulars hadn't been as inattentive during the pandemic. One famous historian had donated lots of new and used books from his personal collection. A senior tech company employee and the author gave Gowda Rs 2 lakh to tide over the national lockdown—announced on March 24, 2020—which abruptly shuttered all retail businesses.

It was a relief to be back among the familiar stacks. I adeptly steered the husband away from a teetering pile of hard-bound Karnataka Gazetteers and, as penance, bought whatever crime fiction Gowda recommended. Thank god for his impeccable taste.

Like many indie bookstores, Gowda survived by upping his online game. In 2020 he Speed-Posted books to the remotest corners of the country. A customer in Sovima village in Nagaland, more than 3,000 km away, ordered and received The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue by VE Schwab from Bookworm. Gowda says 15-20% of his business now originates from social media.

Bookstores in airports and malls were worst hit but many standalone stores—whose owners and employees wear their love of books as a badge of honour—were inventive and resourceful enough to make it through the long dark tunnel of the pandemic. “Bookstores that were flexible and ready to innovate (tying up with Swiggy to deliver, for example), those that took risks and those that have a USP [unique selling proposition] thrived,” says literary agent Kanishka Gupta. “People who sell books like soap suffered most.”

Gupta should know. Since March he has curated around 200 stories under the head Publishing and the Pandemic for Scroll. These tales of hope and passion range from the Kashmiri book seller who distributed books via doctors, the only people allowed out for months in a strict curfew, to the Delhi bookstore that realised early what they needed to do more than ever: “Be there for our community before we ask them to show up for us.”

The community certainly showed up in December when Ram Sarangan tweeted about his mother's new bookstore in Tamil Nadu's Nagercoil. “I had 250 followers and I was expecting five people to like my tweet.” Instead, after his book lover colleagues at The Indian Express did their bit to spread the word, it became his most popular tweet.

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