“Of course, no one simply reads, or rereads, a given book. One reads a certain edition at a specific time in one’s life, and the particular book’s smell, typeface, and paper can be as much a part of the experience as one’s physical and emotional circumstances.”
I used to think this sort of thing was drippy sentimentality,
a wallow in a make-believe past. Now it’s nearly an everyday occurrence. For
books – good books -- my memory hasn’t seriously faded. I don’t think of Lolita. I think of the Crest Giant
paperback I bought in 1968 from James Books in Parma, Ohio, and read on my
parents’ porch that summer.
The passage at the top is from Tess Lewis’ review/essay “Once Is Not Enough: Rereading and Remembering,” published in the Autumn 2002 issue of The Hudson Review. Lewis is a fairly tough-minded reader. She quotes
Nabokov’s well-known declaration in his Lectures
on Literature (1980): “One cannot read
a book, one can only reread it.” In fact, almost the only books worth reading are
the ones you will want to read a second time, at least. Lewis writes:
“Pace
Nabokov, you never do read the same book twice, and the betrayal of earlier
selves and the flirtation with possible
new ones that rereading occasions can bring relief, joy, or nostalgia as much
as it can piquancy.”
In 1888, three years before his death, Melville self-published
John Marr and Other Sailors in an
edition of twenty-five copies. The title poem is prefaced with a brief prose passage that is almost a short story. I was exchanging thoughts the other day with
a reader about Willa Cather’s prairie novels and “John Marr” came to mind. Marr
is a former sailor who “settles down about the year 1838 upon what was then a
frontier-prairie, sparsely sprinkled with small oak-groves and yet fewer log-houses
of a little colony but recently from one of our elder inland States.” Which in
turn recalls a passage from “Loomings,” Chapter 1 of Moby-Dick: “Go visit the Prairies in June, when for scores on
scores of miles you wade knee-deep among Tiger-lilies . . .”
I first read “John Marr” in the Penguin paperback Billy Budd, Sailor and Other Stories (1970), purchased in a bookstore in Savoy during my first visit to France. On the title page I wrote my name followed by “7-24-73 Chambéry.” The pages are browning but after half a century the book remains intact and perfectly (re)readable.
Lewis’ essay begins as a review of Wendy Lesser’s Nothing Remains the Same: Rereading and Remembering
(2002) – the first book I ever ordered from Amazon. The book arrived at our
house in Saratoga Springs, N.Y., on a rainy day and was ruined. They promptly
replaced it and I was impressed. I had interviewed Lesser two years earlier in
Berkeley for a freelance newspaper story I was writing.
All of this is confirmation of my conviction that
all books are one book, as Borges told us long ago.
Whenever I think about David Copperfield, I picture a fat, orange-spined Penguin Classics paperback, and remember the desert of Northern Mexico, where I read much of the book while on a trip with college friends, forty-two years ago.
ReplyDeleteJust read the review you referenced, and really enjoyed it, so thanks for mentioning it! Even better, I discovered that I can sign up for JSTOR as an "independent researcher" and get to read 100 JSTOR articles per year! How cool is that, especially since I'm no longer working for a library (although, come to think of it, my library card might include access to JSTOR). And, speaking of re-reading and its unexpected pleasures, the fact that one lifetime is hardly enough to read only a fraction of The Best Stuff makes the prospect of re-reading anything even less likely, purely from a sort of "statistical" standpoint. On the other hand, it intrigues me that I have a bookloving friend who's read Prous FIVE TIMES and has no regrets about doing so.
ReplyDeleteThomas Parker, I have a special fondness for the orange-spined Penguin English Library.
ReplyDeleteI was quite excited to see one of them show up on one of those Inspector Dalgleish teleplays.
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