In keeping with our era’s apocalyptic flavor, I sense the Robinson Crusoe Fantasy is growing in popularity. You’ll recall in Chap. VI when Crusoe builds a raft and salvages what he judges most useful from the shipwreck: “bread, rice, three Dutch cheeses, five pieces of dried goat’s flesh (which we lived much upon), and a little remainder of European corn,” etc. Today, a similar process is underway, for instance, among survivalists – evaluating what is essential, optional and irrelevant in the way of fuel, medical supplies and guns. More benignly, I see readers deciding what books to bring when the grid goes down and civilization collapses. The latest to do so is Douglas Dalrymple at Idlings:
“I imagine a sequestered
life – in a mountain cabin or a bolthole near the sea – where I’m planted for
the rest of my days with nothing to do but tend to my own comfort, walk in the
afternoons, and read by the fire. It’s a small, snug place, with only a
mantelshelf for books – a minimal library. But which books to stock it with?
This is my version of the old desert island game.”
His list of literary
staples overlaps heavily with my own. The only title on Douglas’ list I haven’t
read – or even heard of -- is Jacobus de Voragine’s The Golden Legend. I
can do without the Cervantes and Dickens, and might substitute Tristram Shandy
and Pale Fire. I would replace Francis Parkman’s History of France
and England in North America with Henry Adams’ nine-volume History of the United States During the
Administrations of Thomas Jefferson and James Madison. The most surprising
item on Douglas’ list is Paradise Lost – surprising because I know he is Roman Catholic, though recently he wrote appreciatively of Milton’s epic. His
most inspired choice is The Oxford Book of Aphorisms, edited by John
Gross. At some point, the smallest of forms, the aphorism, converges with the
most expansive, the epic. What they share is density of meaning.
Douglas’s criteria are honest
and commonsensical: “books that make good company, reward re-reading, and give
pleasure.” In addition, and perhaps already implicit in those standards, I
would require lasting substance, books that cannot be exhausted. There’s nothing
wrong with escapist fare, “beach books,” pure distraction, but not for the long
haul. Only three titles on Douglas’ list date from the twentieth century. The
rest were written earlier. His list is idiosyncratic, as any serious reader’s would be,
but not freakishly so. Generations of readers have already agreed with him.
1 comment:
An excellent column, as usual. And: thanks for the mention of Henry Adams's "History." I just ordered the set from the Library of America. Looking forward to reading it.
Post a Comment