“In any case, reading is merely the first step to rereading.”
At last, someone has said what I have always known but never articulated. Most books made to be read once probably shouldn’t be read the first time. Reading is culling. That’s how we sift out the books we never wish to read again. As Nabokov puts it in “Good Readers and Good Writers,” his introduction to Lectures on Literature (1980): “Curiously enough, one cannot read a book: one can only reread it. A good reader, a major reader, an active and creative reader is a rereader.”
One of my favorite living writers
of prose is the poet Kay Ryan. Her tone is distinctive, a sort of dry,
sophisticated whimsy. Whimsy is dreadful when it’s a lobotomized hippie affectation,
unseemly childishness in an adult who ought to know better. Think Richard
Brautigan. Ryan is ever the grownup. Her prose and poems recall Marianne Moore’s.
She isn’t afraid to see silliness and wonder in her surroundings and within herself.
The passage quoted at the top is from “Reading Before Breakfast,” collected in Synthesizing
Gravity: Selected Prose (Grove Press, 2020). It’s not the first piece in
the book but it was the first I read, mostly because of the title. And in her
third paragraph she mentions Nabokov’s Lectures on Literature. She likens
rereading to “our most picturesque images of creation and transformation.” Typically,
she uses a scientific analogy:
“[I]magine a glass filled
with a supersaturate solution; if you give it a tap, it could turn to crystals.
Rereading is like these mysteries. Open to a paragraph or even a line and—tap!—the
complete composition precipitates. I never ‘acquire’ these books. It is
maddening, but I can never remember books, especially my favorite ones. I don’t
like them to come up in conversation. But if I reread a line, then it is all
around me again, my real landscape, my real feelings, all familiar. Where
have I been?”
In explanation of her
title, Ryan means the books she reads first thing in the morning, before she
starts writing. It is only then, she says, that she can “bear them”: “I go to
these writers because they contain the original ichor.” For the Greeks, ichor
is the ethereal fluid flowing through the veins of the gods. We might think of
it as a divine energy drink—Monster for immortals. She cites an interesting
assortment of writers and books: Milan Kundera’s Testaments Betrayed,
Martin Buber’s The Legend of the Baal-Shem, William Bronk’s Vectors
and Smoothable Curves. “I notice that most of my morning books,” she
writes, “are by poets and novelists—but their essays rather than their poetry or
novels.” Which is precisely the category
of book we are reading by Ryan. She approvingly closes her brief essay with
lines from Auden’s essay collection The Dyer’s Hand:
“Occasionally I come
across a book which I feel has been
written especially for me and for me only. Like a jealous lover I don’t want
anyone else to hear of it.”
1 comment:
Occasionally I come across a book which I feel has been written especially for me and for me only.
David Lodge's book Changing Places was such a book for me. He was at Berkeley at the same time as I was, and moved to Birmingham at the same time as I did. I was familiar with most of the places and events that inspired his book, though I lived a much less exciting life than his characters did. Long after I read the book he and I both left Birmingham at about the same time. I don't think I ever met him, and I certainly didn't know him, though I knew people who did.
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