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Are you a book lover? If you are, this is one road trip for the ages.
Satabdi Mishra and Akshay Rautaray certainly seem to think so – the two young Indians who started ‘Walking BookFairs’.
In 2014, they carried books in a backpack in Semiliguda (a small town in Koraput, Odisha) and displayed them in public places – like the bus stop or a foot path. This way, everybody would get a look at the books.
The idea behind the name ‘Walking BookFairs’ isn’t difficult to figure out either. The duo bought a second hand Maruti Van with the help of friends and went to all the 30 districts of Odisha with the books.
(Rautaray, 34, incidentally, left an enviable job in the publishing industry to kickstart his pet project. Satabdi, 32, had been an advertising professional.)
The initiative was a grand success – following which, the duo went on yet another ambitious drive called ‘Read More, India’.
They covered 20 Indian states across 10,000 km.
And everywhere they went, book lovers, old and new, embraced them.
As book lovers and owners of an independent bookstore (also called ‘Read More, India’) in Bhubaneswar, Mishra and Rautaray believe that books are for everyone – not just a particular section of the society.
Mishra, incidentally, also drives the now upgraded, swanky truck – that carries an eclectic mix of about 4000 books – everywhere they go.
India suffers from an indifference towards ‘reading for pleasure’, they discovered in their travels.
While school and college libraries they visited mostly stocked academic books or reference books, they rarely found a public library or a bookshop in most places.
In a bid to do as they preach, they undertook the countrywide tour to promote reading and books.
Mishra and Rautaray held public books displays where everybody was welcome to browse or read books for free at the venue. People could also buy books at a good discount if they wished.
Sales aren’t their top priority, the duo – who first met at a bookstore and have been TedEx speakers together – insist.
They just want people to feel a ‘need’ for books. Little wonder then that they’ve been driving from city to city to put a book in one’s hand.
The idea has garnered a great amount of social media attention – as well as sparked interest in the setting up of physical bookstores for some.
While these are telling ways to know one is succeeding, the Odisha couple has no plans to stop anytime soon.
“We will keep walking,” they put it simply.
(Runa Mukherjee Parikh has written on women, culture, social issues, education and animals, with The Times of India, India Today and IBN Live. When not hounding for stories, she can be found petting dogs, watching sitcoms or travelling. A big believer in ‘animals come before humans’, she is currently struggling to make sense of her Bengali-Gujarati lifestyle in Ahmedabad.)
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