I have been reading since I was a child. I can't remember a time when I wasn't reading. Papa had nurtured my love for books, newspapers and periodicals.
Reading has given me the courage to be who I am. It helps me make sense of the world. It allows me to step into lives apart from my own. It builds empathy in me. It helps me express myself with clarity.
Books have sparked my imagination. Reading is invaluable as it assists us in understanding people and their emotions. Growing up with books has instilled in me an impetus to familiarise myself with the art of storytelling.
Reading has enlarged my horizon. It has developed my personality.
I love books that explore relationships, identity and complexities of life. Fiction has been the platform that has brought them alive.
There was a time when I used to read three books a day. I had been searching for a job. I was staying at home. My siblings had been away in their college hostels. After Papa left for his work, Mummy and I were the two at home. I would be immersed in my books - fiction, western and thillers - and Mummy on finishing her tasks in the kitchen would spend hours together reading the bible, praying and singing spirituals in praise of God. The exact count of books I had been through those two years is beyond recall.
Later on my favourite spot for reading became my travels. When you travel you have to spend a long time over it. And it helps you catch up with reading as nothing can replace the experience of getting lost in a good book.
One thing I am sanguine.
Reading has transformed me.
Reading has built me up.
I composed this, drawing inspiration partially from the reflections of Indian actors Andrea Jeremiah and Kalyani Priyadarshan in Trivandrum Times, The Times of India of June 19, 2026 on the influence of books and reading in their lives. For me, they were depicting my own life. I have taken the liberty of interjecting what I had been through here apart from reframing a few words, phrases and sentences in the articles.

