An Ode to Books By Christine Gunderson
When I think
about this month’s theme of Loved and Lost, I think about the 800 plus books in
my house.
Instead of having
a dining room or a formal living room like normal, practical people, my husband
and I have a room devoted to our books.
His books are almost
exclusively non-fiction and mine almost exclusively fiction. Between the two of
us, we have everything from Jane Austen to Stephen Pinker. A person of any taste
or interest could be stranded in our house for a month with no electricity and never
be bored.
Some of the books
are beloved old friends I received as gifts when I was a kid, like Little Women and The Black Stallion. Others are more recent acquisitions. Before we
had children, my husband and I would spend rainy weekends roaming used books stores,
looking for new friends to read and add to our shelves.
Our library has two
comfortable wingback chairs and reading lamps. On a cold, grey day, with a
fire, a cup of tea and a book, it’s my favorite place in the world. At night, my
kids gather in the library and I read Harry Potter aloud.
We open Christmas
and birthday presents in the library. It’s a special room, not utilitarian like
the kitchen or cluttered with technology and noise like the family room. It’s
like stepping into the past. Quiet. Calm. And best of all, the shelves are
filled with some of the finest friends I’ve ever had.
I love it. But
someday, I know it will be lost.
My husband has
already stopped contributing to our shelves. He switched to e-books a long time
ago. But I still remain devoted to print books. My idea of a dystopian future
is a world where libraries and Barnes and Noble close their doors and there are
no more print books to be found.
Wendy Williams recently
wrote a great book called The Horse: The
Epic History of Our Noble Companion. Think for a moment about the horse’s
utility and ubiquity throughout most of human history. Now ask yourself, when
was the last time you saw a real, live horse?
Loved and lost.
Will printed books share the same fate as the horse?
Will my kids
really want to move 800 books into their homes when my husband and I are gone? Will
used bookstores still exist if they want to offload our beloved volumes to
someone else?
Or maybe I don’t
need to worry. Just like people we’ve loved, good books stay with us long after
they’re physically gone. They linger inside our mind and eventually become part
of our memories and thoughts. Maybe if you truly love something, it’s never
really lost at all.
###
Christine Gunderson is a young adult
author living outside of Washington D.C. You can visit her website at
christinegunderson.com or follow her on Twitter at @gunderchristine.
I still vastly prefer print books, and so far I see about as many people on the commuter train reading paper as reading screens. I don't know if print books will ever become exclusively for collectors, or if they'll hang on the way radio hung on even after the advent of TV.
ReplyDelete*gasps* I love both my print and my e books but this is a dystopian world I never considered. You're right, of course. B Dalton, Waldenbooks, Borders -- all gone.
ReplyDeleteI'm with you on piles and piles of books...
ReplyDelete