Monday, April 18, 2011

The Joy of Old Books

    On my desk are three old books: Macaulay’s essays, vol. 1 (no date); Lamb’s works Vol. 1, 1857; and Ruskin’s Works (no date).  Each of these was half bound in leather with marbled papers filling in the rest of the binding.  The pages are a little yellowed.  Some of them have water stains, probably decades old.  The proximity to the life of their authors is rather close in all cases.  I have not read them yet, but I find myself looking at them often.
    One of our art history instructors has commented that there is a danger in being exposed to work only digitally: we cease seeing a piece of art as an object and start to see it as data.  I wonder if we may be close to making the same mistake with books.  With these old volumes that I am drawn to, the idea of book-as-an-item is obvious.  They are visual, tactile and olfactory encounters as well as intellectual stimulation.  When I touch them, I am also touching all the readers who came to this book before me.  Their fingerprints may well be on the books still.
    I own an e-book reader and enjoy it.  I enjoy the ability to gain instant access to books that are not available in my local bookstores.  I enjoy the portability of it.  In one small device, I have dozens of books.  I tolerate the cold sterility of it because of its usefulness.  I even try to dress it up on warm leathers.  I have yet to try the old book smelling perfumes.  I can only deceive myself so much.

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