Secondhand Stories: A Book Crawl Through Singapore
17 July 2016 by Vikas Kailankaje
Second-hand shops are fast dwindling. The unreasonable demands of landlords are as much to blame as the waning interest of the reading public. Why rummage in a dusty bookstore when you can tap away and place an order with Amazon or Book Depository? Well, there are a number of pleasures you miss, the joy of a serendipitous find being of one them.
Past Lives
The National Library’s Lee Kong Chian Reference Library has a collection donated by Edwin Thumboo*. Straddling two aisles worth of shelves, this collection offers a peek into a local poet laureate’s particular diet of literature spanning decades – a clear departure from the shelves of a general library or a bookstore collection.
*Editor's note: Edwin Thumboo is a Singaporean poet and academic who is regarded as one of the pioneers of English literature in Singapore.
Last November, the closing sale of VTS Books at Irving Industrial Building piqued my attention. This second-hand collection of over 30,000 books initially grew out of the late Aravind Nair’s home library, then a shop at Upper Cross Street before shifting much later into a warehouse. As with Thumboo’s collection, this warehouse bore traces of Nair’s wide-ranging interests, from spirituality to regional politics.
Now imagine row upon row of shelves that are a repository of memories, each pre-loved book from a distinct owner. That is how I have come to see second-hand bookshops – as bearing traces of past lives. While leafing through yellowed pages, I have uncovered underscored passages, dedicatory messages and margin notes hastily penned that enriched the delight of reading.
One overcast afternoon, I ventured on a book crawl with book aficionados Zarina and Marc. Treat this as a taster. It is not a comprehensive listing or a history of second-hand dealers. If you wish to retrace our footsteps in prospecting for that serendipitous find, follow the directions given!
ORCHARD: ANA BOOKSTORE
We start our crawl at ANA Bookstore (Far East Plaza, #05-01). Always smartly dressed, the proprietor, Mr Mohd Noorul Islam, exudes a charisma that's rare in this trade. Most proprietors I know are camera-shy and do not venture past small talk with new customers. In the course of our banter, he confessed that reading was not amongst his hobbies. Fair enough, nothing unusual there. He picked “Beano” when pressed on what he would read for pleasure and obliged our request for a picture by gamely posing with a copy of “Dennis & Gnasher: Biggest Joke Book Ever!”.