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Friday, 16 September 2011

The Lament of Homes Without Bookcases...

Posted on 11:33 by john mycal

Picture from The Telegraph 
Date:  Sept. 14, 2011


Reading The Telegraph's article yesterday on the dearth of books and bookcases in modern homes, I was just sickened.
What a loss for all of us who love books and feel at home in the homes of those who have them.  I pray this will not become a national plague.

Harry de Quetteville, author of the article in note, poses the question, "Without books, how are we supposed to furnish a room?"  He's so right, as far as I'm concerned.  A former interior designer, I know the warmth and anchor a bookcase can give to a room.  It can often be the most beautiful of case pieces in a room, holding artful volumes that give a small window of insight into the hearts and minds of their owners.  A room without books and bookcases is like a woman without her perfume and jewelry.  It lacks luster and lasting beauty...it hints at no mysteries.

The author quips, "The demise of the dust-jacketed tome, with all its spine-cracking, page-turning charms, is a reason to lament. How else will one make snap judgments about other people if one cannot run one’s eye along their Penguin Classics? Kindles and iPads look the same, whether you are reading Jackie or Wilkie Collins. "

Oh, so right!  How can we possibly see what others are reading?  It's a little picture of who they are. It's a small inkling of what makes them tick.  Gives insight into whether we'll find them interesting, intelligent, adventurous, dull and lackluster or whatever.  Kindles and iPads are great; and, they have their place in our lives, but how sad when we don't get to sneak a peek at our neighbor's book covers  in public just to find out what they're reading!  It's been one of my favorite passtimes at the airport and bookstores.  The same goes for their living spaces.

I thought it was ironic, too, when the article finished with the idea that some coffee tables would be holding large photo books on decorating.  Books...but books for display only, about walls without books.  Talk about an oxymoronish picture.

I for one rarely ever find friendship with someone who doesn't have books in their livingroom/greatroom.  What could we possibly have in common?  If someone doesn't read or care enough about books to have them, I would have nothing to say to them that would be on an intelligent level.  It's difficult for me to make superficial small talk.  Also, I could care less about what other decorations spot the room!  Furnishings and arrangements are also superficial in most cases unless there are personal items peppering the room.  There's really nothing new about furniture under the sun, in my opinion, except new fabrics.
I also read this week that sales of ebooks have sharply risen this year, while hard copy book sales have fallen.  That really concerns me.  That's like putting them on a "soon to be extinct" list!

I'm a writer as well as a reader.  My reviews are a format for my writing and are held up by the books I read.  My best work comes out of hard copies.  There's nothing like an honest-to-goodness book for reading; it's warm, tactile, smells wonderfully of glues and paper, has beautiful cover artwork to return to, often includes decorative end pages and internal pages, can be flipped around in and taken notes in (though I don't write in mine), and so much more. 

I lose the continuity in an ebook.  I sometimes lose the connection with the characters on and off.  There's just something missing where an ebook is concerned and I never feel I've given a review my best when it comes from an ebook instead of a real book.

Will our grandchildren loose the special experience of a book in hand?  They already read by Kindle, Nook, iPad and laptop, as we know...  
Anyway, these are my thoughts about books and lamenting their slow loss in our homes and laps.  What say you about the situation?
Are you concerned or not?  Do you favor one or the other?
Deborah/TheBookishDame
The one who has too many books in her greatroom 

*I want to especially thank my dear friends who have left comments on this post.  Their messages highlight different aspects of having and saving books, and I encourage you to take a look at them.
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