It is Day 81 of the Movement Control Order (MCO), a lockdown happening throughout the nation that evolved into the Conditional Movement Control (CMCO), which is still in place until June 9.
Facade if the MPH bookstore in Johor Baru City Square |
With the various forms of lockdowns in force, cities
around the world ground to a halt as people cooperated to stay at home to stay
safe as the vicious coronavirus, dubbed Covid19, wreaked havoc among patients and
stretched healthcare systems.
With restrictions in travel and strict limits set for
grocery or food shopping, the mood was both somber and stressful.
For a while, the novelty of staying home was fun but
as the weeks turned into months, people who were working-from-home (WFH)
noticed that in spite of a more relaxed work environment, they were working for
longer hours than ever before!
With the MPH team at JB City Square bookstore for my Meet-the-Readers event held there |
Midway through the MCO, merchants started to actively
promote their products online and it ranged from food and beverage, to festive clothes
and of course, books.
In addition to completing home improvement projects,
playing computer games, watching cable television and cooking/baking for the
family, the MCO was an excellent opportunity to catch up on some reading.
As offices and businesses started to open in stages,
we are reading reports about how many are struggling to survive the economic
fallout due to the virus pandemic and subsequent lockdown.
Then a few days ago, my aunty who lives in USJ and
frequents Subang Parade, alerted me to the news that the MPH Bookstore there,
was closing its doors.
A display of My Johor Stories 2: Interesting Places and Inspirational People in a MPH bookstore |
If she were browsing around this bookstore, she would
not fail to check out the Non-Fiction section to see if my books were on the
shelf and often snapped a photograph to share with me.
This photo would show the books on the shelf and if
necessary, I could get in touch with MPH to alert them to restock the books and
keep them available for sale.
As I read more news reports that confirmed that MPH
was closing bookstores in the Klang Valley as well as in Johor Baru, I was
overwhelmed by a bittersweet feeling.
People are finding other ways to buy and read books,
so bookstores everywhere are seeing a decline in income and this downward trend
was further aggravated by the MCO.
Another shot with MPH team at JB City Square bookstore |
Then I learnt that in Johor Baru, the MPH bookstores
in Johor Baru City Square and the Mall in Taman Universiti would be closed
while only one MPH bookstore will remain opened at the Aero Mall,
linked to the Senai International Airport.
In 2017, I was privileged to partner with MPH to
publish, My Johor Stories: True Tales, Real People, Rich Heritage, a
title which went to the No. One spot in the MPH Non-Fiction Bestsellers list in
the first week of its launch in mid-July.
Over the next few months, this title stayed steadily on
the MPH Non-Fiction Bestsellers list and at the end of the year, it was counted
among The Best of MPH books in 2017.
With the strong partnership of MPH Publishing and
Think City Johor Baru, I was encouraged to work on a sequel and in 2018, My
Johor Stories 2: Interesting Places and Inspirational People, was published.
At MPH bookstore at 1Utama Kuala Lumpur with my friends for the Meet-the-Readers event held there |
Book Two features more Memories with exciting
details in my grandfather stories, Portraits of inspirational people in
various Johor towns and established brands and household names of Heritage Traders
who are still doing the business started by their forefathers.
I believe the local flavour of My Johor Stories
strikes a familiar chord among readers who care about a bygone era and who
treasure the past as we move into the future.
Some hotels and resorts understand that guests enjoy
staying in a place with a story and they placed my books in their rooms and
suites for the guests’ reading pleasure.
Christopher Ling at the JB City Square bookstore |
I was both honoured and delighted when Iskandar
Regional Development Authority (IRDA) obtained hard-cover versions of my two
books to present to their Board of Directors and as corporate premium gifts.
So, this closure of MPH bookstores deeply saddens me
because some of my fondest memories happened at the MPH bookstores in JB City Square and IUtama in Kuala Lumpur, where my Meet-the-Readers events were held.
MPH also supported me by providing their retail teams
who set up book sale tables at various events both in JB and in KL, where I
introduced My Johor Stories in talks and presentations.
They made sure my books were readily available for the
audience to get their own copies soon after my presentation and they could even
have them autographed!
At JB City Square bookstore with [L to R] visitors Catherine, Peter Cheong and Pat |
With the new-normal practices of physical distancing
among other Standard Operating Procedures, these experiences in Meeting-the-Readers
and talks or presentations to a gathered audience, seem to be relegated to
precious memories from the past.
From old photos and blog posts, I am able to reflect on my experiences with MPH and their bookstores and fondly recall the times I
brought friends to the bookstore in JB City Square to get copies of my books.
The most recent visits in 2019 were in October with Christopher Ling, Artistic Director of Theatrethreesixty, and in
December with Peter Cheong and his daughter, Catherine, who were visiting from
Canada, each time as the final stop at the end of our heritage walk and food
trail in JB.
My mother [seated on wheelchair] at the MPH bookstore in Aero Mall, Senai International Airport, Johor |
While I am saddened to see the closure of physical bookstores, I
am encouraged that readers are still buying from virtual bookstores and that there
is still an MPH bookstore at Aero Mall, next to the Senai International Airport
in JB.
Even with the closure of physical bookstores, readers
can still visit the MPH virtual bookstore to get my books from www.mphonline.com,
from MPH bookstores nationwide and other good bookstores in the capital city.
It will certainly take more time before the CMCO restrictions
are relaxed and for now, no one can be sure if things would ever be like it was
before.
As we adjust and adapt to the new-norm, our past
experiences are now treasured memories and in many situations, possibly already
a thing of the past.
This just spurs me on to document more My Johor
Stories for posterity.
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