The Great and the Good (Books) by Pauline Chandler
Ha! I’ve tried this before and I know exactly what happens. I pick up a lounging book and it infects and entrances me, so that a while later I come to and find myself lounging about too, in my armchair, half way through its pages.. You know it’s true.
To be fair, you have to give a book on death row a chance. In order to find those I can safely discard, I’ve decided that a book worth keeping has to have taught me
something, ie it’s one of the ‘great’, or it has entertained me, in which case it’s one of the ‘good’. All keepers have to be something I shall read again some day.
Some people collect books and keep them all,
until every room in the house has bulging book shelves. Some lucky ones have a designated room
called the library. Wow and gosh. I'd love that. In my blue sky moments,
I can see myself in my own library. I'd sit there all day every day reading,
with the odd writing stint thrown in, and I'd have a slave robot to make me
tea and bring cake.
It’s not going to happen. My space for books in our house
is limited. Each book has to pay its way on to my shelves, though
it is hard to restrain myself. I buy books every week (mainly from markets and
charity shops) and consequently, the few shelves being full, there are piles of
books in almost every room, awaiting judgement day. I'd just love to get them all on to the shelves, just once, all neatly arrayed, if only to facilitate safe hoovering.
Well, I’ve spring cleaned the shelves and this is what I’ve
kept.
v
The Dictionaries. The best used of these is the
Compact OED, a gift from a friend (thank you, Michael), which you may know comprises
two weighty volumes with minute print. It comes in a neat box with a little
drawer, in which is a magnifying glass.
v
Books about language. There’s Fowler’s ‘Modern English Usage’,
Gowers’ Plain Words, Partidge on ‘Usage and Abusage’, as well as ‘Eats Shoots
and Leaves’ by Lynne Truss and Keith Waterhouse’s ‘English, Our English’. All are
wonderful to browse through at odd moments.
Hobbies and Interests |
v Bibles and Theological. I’m a bit on and off as
far as official Christian doctrine is
concerned. There’s a sign outside our local church announcing that God’s family
meets there on Sundays and I’m welcome to join them. Why is God's family only in that church? Isn't God's family everybody everywhere? That poster is really off-putting. I am a Christian though, I think. I still
adore the words of the liturgy and the music it’s inspired over the centuries.
And, for me, no one else has come near to suggesting the best way to live. The
Good Samaritan, the Sermon on the Mount, ‘Love one another’, and the hope of an
afterlife, ‘my Father’s house has many mansions’. What can it mean except that there’s good in
everybody and a place for everybody in life and afterwards. As you can
see, I stumble a bit on this subject, but I can’t deny the certainty inside me
that there is more than we know or can know.
v
Humour. I’m certainly not getting rid of anything
that’s ever made me laugh. Alan
Bennett’s Diaries, Thelwell’s ‘Three Sheets in the Wind’, Heath Robinson’s
cartoons, ‘Just William’, ‘Jeeves and Wooster ,’
‘Blandings’. All wonderful!
v Books about writing. For instance, there's ‘Writing Down the
Bones’ by Natalie Goldberg, ‘The Artist’s Way’ by Julia Cameron and Alan
Garner’s magnificent ‘The Voice that Thunders’.
I read these obsessively when I started writing for publication,
thinking there must be some trick , that somewhere in their pages, was the
secret of how to be a writer. Ha!
Ah,
yes! Look, there’s ‘Mind Readings’ too, an amazing book, a collection of essays, 'Writer’s Journeys Through Mental States', edited by Sara Dunn, Blake
Morrison and Michele Roberts. Love that book!
None of these books got me published, but they did soothe my troubled mind, so they’re staying!
v
What else survived the cull? Shakespeare, of
course. I never get tired of his plays.
I’m always ready to read them again or see the next performance.
v
POETRY!! That’s writ large because poetry, above
all, is for keeps, isn’t it?
v
And so to the fiction shelves, but I’ll tell you
about those next time.
Happy spring cleaning and good
luck throwing books away!
Pauline Chandler
www.paulinechandler.coma
Comments
Well, I may do one day. How should I know?