I’ve had several friends among booksellers over the years. I once dreamed of becoming a bookseller myself, with a friend who was a poet from New York City. We had a name – Omega Books, shortened to O Books – but no business sense and no capital. I suppose every serious reader entertains such pipe dreams, until we grow up. Few of the booksellers I’ve known have been serious readers. Most valued books, and not just financially, and not merely as cultural bric-a-brac. But few were devoted readers. They were unlikely to know many books from the inside. Books were product, like lawnmowers. Such an understanding may be wise. To love books too much might make one reluctant to part with them. The Ur-text to consult is Marius Kociejowski’s A Factotum in the Book Trade (Biblioasis, 2022).
In December
I wrote about an essay by Catharine Savage Brosman, “Four Modes of Book
Collecting,” in which she describes a London bookseller of her acquaintance who
was blind. Some years earlier, Brosman had published a poem, “The Bookseller” (Passages, Louisiana State University
Press, 1996), perhaps narrated by the same blind bookman:
“Until I
die, I shall abide by books--
feeling the
leather and the gilded spine,
running my
thumb along the rippled edge,
sensing the
musty cloth, the wormy page,
the odor of
a chest or rooms untended
where a
distant heir one day divined
a windfall
for his bank account, and called
on me. Here,
watch your step; I cannot
“see, but my
companion says that books
have almost
filled the hallway, overflowed
the bedroom,
where I feel their presence
in the night
among my dreams.--Would you have
some tea and
scones, or else a hot cross
bun, to mark
the season? Yes, all London
bustles here
on Oxford Street, and I suppose
I need the
sense that others are about;
“but what we know most keenly is desire,
and in desire I know the darkness, not
the life I hear but that which I imagine--
the way you,
reading of the Trojan War
or the
Crusades, perhaps, are startled
by the
telephone, thinking of Helen’s face
instead, of
Hector’s body pulled behind
the wheels
of arrogance. Tamer of horses
“I can never
be -- but rider of another world
informed by paper -- and, for me, in tongues
beneath my
fingertips. To sell, of course,
is
necessary, and I thank you; but I need
to feel
beside me, too, this field of words
aflame,
where blinded poets make the sirens
sing, and I
can almost glimpse the light,
the dazzling
seascape that Odysseus sailed.”
The first
line stands as a dedicated reader’s mantra. And in the third stanza we think
of Borges, the blind librarian: “but what we know most keenly is
desire, / and in desire I know the darkness, not / the life I hear but that
which I imagine--.” And then we think of ourselves: “rider of another world / informed
by paper.”
2 comments:
On the attitude one needs when working in a bookshop, George Orwell is good. See his essay "Bookshop Memories" (1936), about his experiences working in a bookshop in England in the early 1930s.
A personal milestone: for the first time ever, I saw a copy of Holbrook Jackson's brilliant book, "The Anatomy of Bibliomania" (1930) in a used bookshop today. Copies can be found, of course, but that's the first time I've seen it in a shop.
No business sense and no capital? What's kept you out of the crypto "industry"? You could be a billionaire!
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