Navigation Salon Salon Books email print
Arts & Entertainment
.Books
Comics
Health & Body
Media
Mothers Who Think
News
People
Politics2000
Technology
- Free Software Project
Travel & Food
_______
Columnists

 

Current
Wire Stories

Click here to read the latest stories from the wires.

- - - - - - - - - - - -

- - - - - - - - - - - -

Also Today

For a full list of today's Salon Books stories, go to the Books home page.

- - - - - - - - - - - -

Search Salon


  
Advanced Search  |  Help

- - - - - - - - - - - -

Recently in Salon Books

Ivory Tower
Artemio Cruz is just a character in a book. Gen. Obregon was real!
When his students find reality more compelling than fiction, this teacher, a former anarchist, finds it hard to play the authority card.

By David Alford
[09/24/99]


Who killed Brooklyn?
Novelist Jonathan Lethem returns to his hometown to find it almost as strange as his own fiction.

By Lorin Stein
[09/23/99]

Reviews
"Motherless Brooklyn"
An author comes up with a new (and brilliant) twist for the detective novel: A narrator with Tourette's syndrome.

By Gary Krist
[09/23/99]

Reviews
"The Abyssinian"
A prize-winning French novel turns out to be a mound of merde.

By Brigitte Frase
[09/22/99]

Ivory Tower
Capitalism and cosmos
The new economy marches on, its front lines manned with recruits from the nation's top business schools -- elite training camps for the capitalist army.

By Matt T. Stover
[09/22/99]

Complete archives for Books

- - - - - - - - - - - -

- - - - - - - - - - - -




Books feature
Married, with books
_____A couple discovers that love includes many trials -- including the unexpected task of merging, and purging, their libraries.

- - - - - - - - - - - -
By Lindsay Amon

Sept. 24, 1999 | "Do we really need this?" my fiancé asks, holding up a pint-size copy of Wallace Stevens' "Selected Poems."

"Of course we need it," I reply.

"But we already have the 'Collected Poems' in hardback and paperback. Not to mention the New American Library edition."

"But this one's so … portable," I say, searching for a reason to keep this completely superfluous book. It's New York in July, 98 degrees, 100 percent humidity, and OK, I'm a little irrational. We have to move a ton of books to Los Angeles. Not a figurative ton, but an actual one: 1,934 pounds. Our movers have just given us an obscene cost estimate that we can neither believe nor afford. I'm starting to wish I had grown up cultivating a less bulky obsession -- the flute, maybe.

We're standing in a maze of towering and precariously arranged piles of books, removed from the built-in shelves that line all four walls of all three rooms of our Brooklyn Heights apartment. How did we end up with this gross overload? I flash back to our blind date two and a half years ago. Joan, the cupid who set it up, kindled our interest with book talk. "She loves to read," she told Matthew. "He may be the best-read person I've ever met," she told me. Eight months later we merged book collections and lives into a miraculously affordable apartment that could house us and our books. A small fourth-floor walk-up? Circa 1920? No problem. We continued to ply each other with favorite novels, thick poetry collections and glamorous never-to-be-opened gifts such as "The Architecture Pack."

Turning to the shelves, I steel myself. I come from a long line of pack rats -- "throwing away" and "sorting through" are not phrases in the Amon vocabulary. This isn't a matter of choice, I think, and I will have to be ruthless. Whole sections are going to have to go. For instance, the audiobooks: both of them. The tape of Dickens' "Martin Chuzzleworth" I bought Matthew for our first Christmas together is still shrink-wrapped (six-hour abridgement by Paul Scofield -- what was I thinking?). The other, Elizabeth Smart's "By Grand Central Station I Sat Down and Wept," is another easy call. We both loved the book's poetry and passion, and we gave the tape a go on a long drive through Napa last spring. We made it through about three minutes of the singsong lament before exploding in laughter and chucking the tape out the window. We stopped to pick it up (after backing up over it) only because we thought it would make a good joke present. Ha.

Emboldened, I turn to nonfiction. Am I really planning to read that 800-page biography of Lytton Strachey, or do I just enjoy being the kind of person who might? The problem is, I am the kind of person who might. I postpone this decision and move on to unemotional reference books. Four different dictionaries, three thesauruses, "Benet's Readers Encyclopedia": all keepers. You never know.

But what about this two-volume almanac of Polish history, weighing in at three and a half pounds? I bought it seven years ago when I was toying with the idea of writing a novel partially set in Krakow, but it's since become clear I will not be writing this particular novel anytime soon. Nor am I likely to develop a more casual interest in things Polish. It can go. I get ready to chuck it, only to be struck by its pristine, slipcovered beauty. "Definitive," raves one reviewer. Thumbing its thick, cream-colored pages, I can only suppose that it is. And am I really willing to forfeit my claims on the as-yet-unwritten Great Polish-American Novel?

Stealthily, I set it back in the pile of keepers and shift my sights to another teetering stack, topped by Matthew's old copy of "Iron John." This I surreptitiously slip in with the other rejects. Good work.

. Next page | Hitchcockian dementia strikes the collector


 
Illustration by Katherine Streeter/Salon.com


 

Salon | Search | Archives | Contact Us | Table Talk | Ad Info

Arts & Entertainment | Books | Comics | Life | News | People
Politics | Sex | Tech & Business | Audio
The Free Software Project | The Movie Page
Letters | Columnists | Salon Plus

Copyright © 2000 Salon.com All rights reserved.