A reader one-third of my age asks, “Why are books so important to you? What do they matter?” Her questions aren’t cynical. She sounds like a reader driven by the sort of bookish hunger I recognize. Her tastes are eclectic, not confined strictly to the American or the contemporary. She knows her Shakespeare and, better than I, her Robert Browning.
I’ll get the
less flattering answer out of the way: Habit. Pure momentum. Without books I
don’t know what I would do with my time not devoted to family, work and their corollaries
like grocery shopping and laundry. I love movies but for me they amount
to a poor substitute for books. They don’t deliver what I demand of serious reading. I’m willing to
settle for less with movies. A good
action flick easily keeps me occupied for ninety minutes. I expect more of books.
In his essay “Young Poets, Please Read Everything” (A Defense of Ardor, trans. Clare Cavanagh, 2004), the late Adam
Zagajewski, a formidably well-read poet, writes:
“[O]ur
reading takes place chiefly beneath two signs: the sign of memory and the sign
of ecstasy. We read for memory (for knowledge, education) because we are
curious about what our many precursors produced before our own minds were
opened. This is what we call tradition--or history.
“We also
read for ecstasy. Why? Just because. Because books contain not only wisdom and
well-ordered information but also a kind of energy that comes close to dance
and shamanist drunkenness. This is especially true of (some) poetry.”
Those are
handy explanations. I like to learn things, whether quantum mechanics, Henry James’
failure as a writer for the stage or how some people survived the Gulag. But without contradiction
I also read for pleasure, what Nabokov called “aesthetic bliss.” I like works
that are morally complex, like life. I confess to never asking myself why I
read. One glib retort would be, “What’s the alternative?” Reading gives me something
to talk about with people like my young reader. Here is Zagajewski’s “Reading Books” from Tremor (trans. Renata Gorczynski, 1985):
"Reading
books, ah, we kept forgetting
who wrote
them and what fights there were
on every
page, in every sentence.
The dark
moving wood, as on a stage,
grew around the
pen, an arrow snatched
in flight, a
quill stolen
from half-real
birds. It’s only now
they stand
still on the bookshelves, so incurious
without
recollection, like old men warming themselves
on a street
bench in the sun.
Reading
books, we kept forgetting
that fear is
a wolf who dreads himself
at nightfall
and doesn’t know if
there is a
mirror someplace, or a spring,
able to put
out the yellow flicker
in his
slanted eyes. We read books
in order to
learn, with relief,
how
dangerous Plato’s beast is, the drowsy
tiger that
kills only in daylight.”
Books are a
part of life, not its opposite, some esoteric alternative. Only when we forget
who wrote them and treat them as artifacts in a museum, as Zagajewski suggests, do they become inert, strictly
academic.
1 comment:
Well done. Amen to all that.
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