TW3 Home

Review It!

Daily Curmudgeon

New Voices
 Virtual Ink
 Colette's List
 Reel Politik
 Scarlet Pumpernickel
 The Bookstall
|
|
REEL POLITIK

Contrary Commentary
by James Reel

The Sensuous Bibliophile
WE BIBLIOPHILES LIKE TO THINK of ourselves as several cuts above the
television addict, intellectually and perhaps morally. Reading connects us
to a wider world of ideas than does lowest-common-denominator TV programming; the act of moving our eyes across a page and processing the words thereon
engages us more fully than sitting passively before the tube. And so on. Or,
as the TV fan would say, yadda yadda yadda.
Yet, in our relationships with books themselves, we turn out to be every bit
as vulnerable to sensory stimulation -- not to mention every bit as
manipulative, domineering, and even perverted -- as the average drooling
couch potato whose greatest contribution to society is to withdraw from it.
Inveterate readers can be ghouls. We peruse mail-order lists of remaindered
books, tsk over the brief shelf life of certain admired authors, and stifle
a whimper of outrage that their worthy hardcovers are being sacrificed so
quickly in the hope that cheap paperback incarnations will keep the titles
active a few more months. But then we remember that we can now acquire this
stuff for one-quarter the list price. Bring on the order blank, and the
schadenfreude.
It's like visiting the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, reverently poring over the
inscribed names, then zipping over to Arlington National Cemetery to dig up
a few graves.
All right, so it isn't that awful. We are, after all, discussing books,
which, despite our sentimental fantasies, are merely commodities. Yet they
can seem so much more than that -- not when their titles are listed in some
catalog, or when their bibliographic information surfaces during a journey
to the mighty Amazon.com, but when wood pulp actually meets fingertips.
Nowhere is this more true than in a bookstore. Libraries, too, are good
places to come face to fascicle with a fine volume, but there the encounter
is fleeting. At a library you meet a nice book, escort it out to lunch,
engage it in a desultory two-week affair, but you cannot grow old with that
book beside you. Soon it must return to the library shelf, ready for the
next pick-up. Eventually, through its habitual promiscuity, the library book
will lose its freshness, trade its glitzy, commercial but fragile binding
for something sturdy and generic, and begin to smell. The library is a
brothel of books.
A bookstore, in contrast, lures the reader who is both inquisitive and
acquisitive. No book is more seductive than when it beckons from the retail
shelf, because it can be not merely borrowed, but possessed. And so can the
book next to it, and the books across the aisle. Used and antiquarian
volumes have their allure, but new books are particularly irresistible. The
bindings are stiff, the pages white and crisp. The novels don't
automatically fall open to the sex scenes.
During a recent 24-hour visit to Portland, Oregon, I made my first
pilgrimage to what is often called the finest bookstore west of the
Mississippi, Powell's City of Books. It was a quick tour -- I'd fed the
parking meter enough to satisfy it for only 42 minutes, and didn't realize
the store had its own free garage until I was driving away. The rain came
down heavily that morning; perfect weather for book browsing. For the lover
of books, rain is the ultimate make-out music.
Powell's purveys one million new and used volumes in its 43,000 square feet.
Yet -- and this is essential for a bookstore, something that well-intentioned
chains like Borders and Barnes & Noble can't manage -- the place felt intimate. It was sectioned off into many rooms on different levels, and the shelves
rose high toward the ceiling. Here, you felt you could be alone with a book
for a few minutes, getting to know it privately before making what could be
a life-long commitment.
(In case you're wondering, I made it out with only three books: Peter
Esterhazy's novel The Book of Hrabal, which I'd specifically sought,
and a couple of cookbooks encountered by accident, one of them devoted to
vegetarian Lebanese cuisine. I elected not to lug home the hefty, newly-issued second volume of the Cambridge Illustrated History of the Middle
Ages because I was already travelling with several books. One of them
was Bernard Malamud's A New Life, a wonderful campus satire set in a
fictionalized version of Oregon State University in Corvallis, which was my
next destination. And, yes, judging from the preponderance of aggie-jock
buildings, the school still seems to be the same liberal arts-deficient
place Malamud skewered four decades ago. And the central town is just as
lovely, and the surrounding farmland and mountains as compelling, as Malamud
described.)
So we commit to a book, and purchase it. Or, more likely, we purchase
several, polygamously. (Those of us who restrict ourselves to reading one
book at a time might be more charitably regarded as serial monogamists.)
Then, when we get our lovely acquisitions home, what horrors we subject them
to.
Some of us crowd them into unstable piles in the corner, on a chair, or
under a bed, without thought of preserving their physical integrity. Others
force them to stand straight up on hard boards, sometimes even insisting
that their spines be perfectly aligned side by side. (I count myself as one
such tyrant, as do the people at the world headquarters of Bancroft &
Associates, the not entirely disinterested presenters of this column.)
Oh, and the abuse some books must endure: marking, staining, ripping, page-folding, spine-cracking.
This is the price the book must pay for being a desirable physical object -- a
commodity. Of course, we also value the book for its intellectual content,
which provides this form of physical gratification a dimension not
associated with rolling naked in money or frolicking with erotic toys. Yet,
fundamentally, it is the book's corporeality that attracts us right there in
the store or library. Otherwise, we'd read the classics strictly online, and
seek the latest fiction only at the cineplex.

Titles discussed in Reel Politik may be purchased at a discount from The Bookstall.

Reel's Archive
 Reel Politik 1: On The Future Of Reading

Reel Politik 2: How Not To Read A Book

Reel Politik 3: Plagiarists Of Experience

Reel Politik 4: Logolingus: A Private Pleasure

Reel Politik 5: A Community of Dreamers

Reel Politik 6: The Sensuous Bibliophile

Reel Politik 7: A Divine Madness

Reel Politik 8: Show Me The Books!

Reel Politik 9: The Argument

Reel Politik 10: Literacy & Community

Reel Politik 11: Real Writers Need Real Editors

James Reel is
the arts and entertainment editor of The
Arizona Daily Star, a contributor to Fanfare, and
the
author of The Timid Soul's Guide to
Classical Music.

A Not Entirely Disinterested Service of Bancroft
& Associates: Digital Publishers.


|