This is all about having too many books in your
collection….
In high school, Mr. Hayden, our intense,
fascinating, essentially humorless, mean, and sometimes vindictive English
teacher (and D-Day veteran), was really into drilling us with what he called
“Spot Quotes.”
Mr. Hayden teaching us about the Great Old Ones |
It was a rote memorization technique (probably
frowned on now by progressive pedagogical types—I’ll
save my gripes about the modern education system for some other time…), but the
famous and essential quotes from English-language literature were hammered into
our heads. Yeah, yeah, yeah, lots of dead white guys, but it was the early-1980s. I think Mr. Hayden was right: You want to sound smart? Drop a famous (or infamous) quote from classic
literature—
“…full of sound and fury/Signifying nothing….”
“I am his Highness’s dog at Kew/Pray tell me, Sir,
whose dog are you?”
“To a green thought in a green shade….”
“Tyger, Tyger, burning bright…”
“Look upon my works ye mighty, and despair!”
“I’ll burn my books!”
Wait—huh? What was that last one? “I’ll burn my
books!”? How can that be a famous quote? Is it from a revised Fahrenheit 451,
where Montag recants, and rejoins the Fire Department? And what does it have to
do with me owning too many books?
[Break]
“I’LL BURN MY BOOKS!”
A bag of books I'm ridding myself of |
That’s the last line spoken by the main
character in Dr. Faustus by Christopher Marlowe (who, Mr. Hayden
informed us, was killed by being “stabbed in the forehead!”). Faustus is being
dragged to Hell by The Devil, and makes a final attempt to be freed by offering
to destroy all that he’s been going about collecting (what he sold his soul
for): his knowledge.
It’s like the rich man who’s sold his soul for
gold telling Satan, “I’ll be a pauper if you don’t take me!” Well, of course, Mephistopheles
will hear nothing of it. Lucifer’s deals are unbreakable, and besides, why
should the Prince of Darkness believe or care about you?
But giving up something that was (at least at
one point in time) valuable to you can be a noble thing—if done for reasons
that aren’t remotely satanic.
And Marlowe’s quote is in my head lately because
I’ve been trying to give up something valuable to me: My books.
I used to be a prime bibliomaniac.
I used to be tsundoku.
I used to be tsundoku.
Have you ever been in a house or apartment that
has too many books? One of my neighbors in my apartment building
has books EVERYWHERE. All the walls are
covered. Extra shelves were put in, so it looks like books are holding up the
ceiling. It was overwhelming, suffocating. Especially because I wanted to
ignore the cocktail party (boring conversation anyway), and CLIMB THE WALLS to
look at all the books (and try to steal any I didn’t have and coveted). Completely
distracted, I couldn’t wait to get out of there, it was driving me nuts.
Take a look at the “Denver” scenes from Kubrick’s The Shining. The apartment that the Torrances have in the Mile-High
City is overflowing with books. Books can be a perfect place to hide; trust me,
I know: That was the apartment I grew up in—full of books. Books can be a
buffer between people, you can use books to insulate yourself against others,
while claiming to be learning about the world (when really you might be hiding
from some aspects of it).
Some of the books I'm getting rid of. See any faves? |
I admit it: I love that “old book smell.”
I love haunting a used bookstore and checking every nook and cranny for some treasure. It’s something I’ve been doing since a child.
I love haunting a used bookstore and checking every nook and cranny for some treasure. It’s something I’ve been doing since a child.
And once the New Plague has A) either gone away;
B) been cured; or, C) killed 99% of the population (except me, please!), I will
find a used bookstore and spend a lot of time snooping around.
I’ll probably leave with five or six books, and a couple of them I will most
likely never read. (Honestly, thinking about my compulsion makes
me a little queasy.)
Some have written about the “value of owning more books than you could read,” but that sounds stupid. It sounds greedy and
selfish.
Count Dooku. Hardly tsundoku. |
I do not want to be tsundoku! Some of my friends
would revel in that appellation if applied to them, and if it makes them happy,
that’s awesome.
Being tsundoku when you’re younger is an
expression of joy—“I’m gonna read all these fuckin’ books one day!
Yeeee-HA!”
Yeeee-HA!”
But when older, being tsundoku seems… I’m not
sure—desperate? Like you’ve made a deal with Satan—“I can’t die until
I’ve read all the books I own, okay?” [Which, if you’ve studied the ways of
Satan and his contracts, you know never quite works out the way you want it
to—well, most times.]
If my book-collecting friends have the money, space,
and yearning to develop a personal library to equal Andrew Carnegie’s, more
power to them. Me? I’ve only got so much space. Meanwhile, The Missus has
really influenced my sense of style: Clutter is not cool.
Now, some of my personal spaces do get
cluttered, but that tends to be “work-related.” Clutter is oppressive, and
stifling. It’s not a question of the amount of stuff, but how it is displayed.
Less is more. The Pile Theory is a big loser here. Stacks? Sucks.
Nowadays, for me, I must PURGE. If that book’s
been on my shelf for more than 10 years, and I haven’t cracked it? It’s a
goner. (Although that’s not always true: Gravity’s Rainbow and William Gaddis’ JR keep turning up on my shelf. One day, I promise, one day….)
Some people only read on the toilet. Not me. |
Reference books are exceptions, though: There
are plenty I would like to ditch, but can’t because they are/have been/may
become necessary to my employment.
I used to be very much the “tsundoku”—someone
who would buy books and not read them, just let them pile up. I was very smug
and satisfied with myself until some astute person, whose name I cannot
remember now—this was said to me nearly thirty years ago—such a different time!
(Gosh, I miss the 1990s….)
Anyway—I was showing off my collection, and this
person offhandedly said, “I think it was Oscar Wilde who said, ‘Some people
think that owning books is having read them.’”
Saul, baby, I'm trying, I'm trying! |
That quote—from Wilde or not (and I’ve searched)—really
struck me. I felt I was being an intellectual faker (like Gatsby and his unread
library). Even 30 years ago, I knew I had too many books; there wasn’t enough
room, and it looked ugly—like I was a hoarder. Tsundoku, or collector scum?
I still love books, and reading, and
learning—about 50% of what I read is non-fiction (although that is not be
represented by my shelves; because the majority of my non-fiction reading tends
to be of a timely nature, and I don’t like keeping around non-fiction books
that have become outdated, it is from the most-exalted NYPL, so I don’t have to keep it around cluttering my
shelves).
Just one of the shelves at home |
I’ve had about three major book purges in my
life so far—but usually associated with Big Life Changes (moving, going crazy,
being broke…), so these days of the New Plague will consist of Book Purge Four…
I’m at home all the time now, and staring at those overflowing shelves made me
feel… I dunno, maybe dirty is the best way to explain how
I felt.
I still have too many books, but I like what I
have, and I have no intention of getting rid of most of them. In some cases, I
am collector scum (I’ve got signed editions, first editions, rare paperbacks,
out-of-print books, et cetera…). But these are all books that are either loved,
needed or wanted. Most of them, I want to reread (I
tend to reread my faves…)
My apartment building back in 1922 |
Luckily, my apartment building has a sort of “lending
library” in the basement, next to the laundry room. The tenants can leave any
books they don’t need, or take any that catch their fancy. I’ve actually picked
up, read (or started to read and put down), and returned several books to the
basement lending library. And when I leave a book, and then it disappears, I
always wonder which of my neighbors took it? For example, who took my copy of
Russell Banks’ The Darling (good, but no Rule of the Bone), or Forever
and a Death by Donald Westlake? (I’m a huge fan of Westlake’s writing, but
this one was one of his most minor efforts, and not worth keeping around—and I already
have a very large collection of his better books. Hey, I guess I’m not
collector scum, after all! Whew!)
BTW, I also have TOO MANY T-shirts—don’t have to
buy another for fifty years, it looks like—but that’s a post for another day….
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