20th May 2007

Book ends

posted in Uncategorized |

I have always been amazed by people who don’t love books.  People who can’t have them around. 

The OmegaFamily has too many books, frankly.  We have books in heaps and piles all over the house, though most of the books live in the office or in a bookshelf near the TV.  When we were figuring out our net worth for our adoption from China, in a fit of true anal-ness, I counted our books. 

We had about three thousand.

(I then multiplied the paperback books by one multiplier and the hardback books by another, totalled them all up, and stuck them on my little spreadsheet.  I was so darned proud of that spreadsheet!  And then our dossier consultant called from the agency, and she wiffled and waffled, and finally said, “We’re not sure you have enough net worth.”  What?!  I had scooched that number up towards $100,000!  When I explained what I had done, there was a small silence on the other end of the phone, and she finally said, somewhat weakly, “Well, we normally just tell our people to estimate.  Why don’t you use what your insurance agent uses?”  Bah.  So we did that, instead, and the agency was happy.)

I met a man while I was on a visit back to Chicago once who was a very odd duck.  We clicked extremely fast, and I ended up going out with him a time or two.  We finally ended up back at his apartment, and I was amazed at how sterile it seemed…then I realized that he had one bookshelf.  One.  Filled with pristine books.  He informed me that he collected first editions…then he told me he had read none of them.

This was a deal killer for me.

(When I returned back to the southwest, he sent me a book titled “On the Way to the Wedding”.  Obviously, there was a serious miscommunication going on there.  I found it very creepy, actually.)

My grandmother–well on her way to 104 now, but not looking too likely to make it to the year mark–has an odd relationship with books.  She loves to read.  But, to her, books are a disposable item.  You get them from the bookstore or the library, and when you’re done reading them, you get rid of them.  All they are, in her eyes, is something to collect dust.  She doesn’t have the tendency that other people in my family have, of wandering through her (personal) library, finger trailing across book spines, finding an old favorite, pulling it out, leafing through a few pages, and deciding, “Ah!  I’ll read this one again.”  To her, reading a book “again” is a very odd concept.  And paperback books?  Ach.  Truly throwaway items.  She regularly made cracks about my parents’ house filled with paperback books.

What brings this all about is a quote:  “Oh, my parents never cracked a book, just newspapers,” he told the Christian Science Monitor. “But they had lots of books. They bought them at the Salvation Army to fill up empty shelves.”  Which brings to mind the question:  why have bookshelves at all, if you’re not going to read the books you buy to fill them??

The “he” in question is Lloyd Alexander, author of 40 young adult fantasies.  I loved the “The Chronicles of Prydain“, based on Welsh mythology.  The books in this series were some of those old friends that I pulled out of the bookshelf over and over again.  I recommend them for children who are 8 to 9 years old…and older.

Lloyd Alexander died this week of cancer.

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There are currently 12 responses to “Book ends”

  1. 1 On May 20th, 2007, Julie Pippert said:

    If I ran a personal ad for a friend, it would probably say, among other things, “Must love books…must love animals.” I hate to say it, but it might be in that order. LOL

    Books have to earn a spot on my bookshelf. If they fall short, off to Half Priced Books they go.

    I love, I adore…but not unconditionally. ;)

    I also have a bad habit of losing books because I loan them out.

    But…were you to see my books, you’d think them pristine, never read. I am very, very particular about my books. Notes, if I want any, go on stickies, carefully set in the book. Spines are never broken, pages never turned down.

  2. 2 On May 20th, 2007, D said:

    Books. I love books. When K2 first came to my apartment when we started dating, the huge amounts of books everywhere clearly was one of the positive things that she noticed (and likewise when I first came to her house).

    Yet, with space being limited, we have aggressively gone rid of books. We have literally given away (and sometimes sold) thousands of books. I’d need a couple more bedrooms in the house, otherwise. So yes, I love the idea of keeping them all and looking through them, but practicality is simply against that.

  3. 3 On May 20th, 2007, ceedee said:

    Fellow book freak here. Though right about now I’m wishing my husband and I weren’t QUITE so enamored with books. In a month or two we are gonna have to pack them all up, all whateverthousand we have, just to move to our new abode about a mile away. We have them on bookshelves, stacked on the floor, on nightstands, in closets on shelves, in drawers, freaking everywhere.

    My sister-in-law, on the other hand, is one of those strange book fearing creatures. One time when we were visiting I realized that virtually the only non-children’s books in the house weren’t really books at all. It was this hunk of ceramic or resin or something, made up to look like a few books standing together. Very, very weird. They recently moved to a new house, and I think she probably used that opportunity to get rid of both the fake book hunk and her younger daughter’s collection of children’s books, most of which I gave her. Harumph.

  4. 4 On May 20th, 2007, DS-L said:

    Ha - we are trying to move and just filled ten boxes with books from ONE bookshelf and have not cracked the more than 2,000 kids books upstairs in my kids’ rooms. When I asked them to pare down their books they were incapable “I love them all Mama!”
    DS-L

  5. 5 On May 20th, 2007, figlet said:

    I can’t really be friends with someone who doesn’t have books in their home. (Unless, of course they lost their collection in a fire or other calamity, in which case I’d be inclined to help them fill some empty shelves.) J could probably count the number of books I’ve ever given away. I can tell you the name of the person who borrowed and never returned The Diary of Anais Nin: Volume 1. And the one who absconded with my Nora Joyce biography. It’s funny, isn’t it. Houses without books feel really weird to me.

  6. 6 On May 20th, 2007, kris said:

    i re-read many books and have read some since jr high (think almost 40 yrs ago) like ‘to kill a mockingbird’. i bet i have read that book at least 20 times. i used to read ‘the shining’ every may because that is about when the story in the book started. i have read ‘gone with the wind’ at least 3 times, maybe more. who can read a book you love just once!?

  7. 7 On May 20th, 2007, Journeywoman said:

    Oh yeah.

    I am a bookslut. I work in Publishing and there are these wonderful things called “take shelves.” I often go and grab books from the take shelves. FREE BOOKS!!! I have huge shevesl filled of books that I have yet to read. I love books. Love Love Love.

  8. 8 On May 21st, 2007, lizard said:

    When we were waiting and waiting and waiting for the adoption to happen, people would ask “have you strated shopping for the baby?” and for ages and ages I’d say “no…. well, except for books.”

    We would head to Powell’s and always ended out in the kids’ section (where we spent a pleasurable couple of hours just yesterday). We were the only people there without kids half the time.

    I do occasionally pack some books up and sell them to the used bookstores, and I loan them out gladly…. of course, I also sometimes go back and buy back the same titles I sold because I want to read them again.

    We joke that I fell in love with DH because he owned an OED. Well, that wasn’t the only reason.

    I also recommend the Prydain cycle to eveyrone I know with kids the right age. I have loved them for years. Had a friend whose family named a dog after one character, even. So sorry to hear that Lloyd Alexander has died.

  9. 9 On May 21st, 2007, Mrs Figby said:

    We’re book people too. As are our children.

    Lloyd Alexander is one of Zen’s all time favorite authors. He’ll be sad to hear that he passed away.

  10. 10 On May 21st, 2007, Margaret said:

    Oh, yes, books are sacred!!! I probably have half the number you do, but I never thought of adding them to our net worth for adoption purposes. Good idea.

  11. 11 On May 22nd, 2007, Miss Cellania said:

    I was going to say that I am OK with disposable books… I give away most of what I read. In fact, I just got rid of a big bunch of them. Then I looked around and realized I still have six bookcases, and they are mostly full!

  12. 12 On May 22nd, 2007, omegamom said:

    I think I’ll be addressing all these comments in tomorrow’s post…It’s nice to know I’m surrounded by book lovers–though it’s certainly no surprise! After all, people who read (and write) blogs are highly probable to be literate folk, given that blogs are sort of an essayist’s wetdream.

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