larryhammer: floral print origami penguin, facing left (pretty good guy)
[personal profile] larryhammer
My reflex on entering any house or office is to look through the bookshelves. Which is a little bit of "hey can I borrow that" and, okay, a little bit of snooping, but it's also a personal introduction -- your books show a contour of your mind. I justify that mixed-motive claim by noting that the shelf I most want to check out is the most private of all: the nightstand. What does this person end the day with, intend to get to, keep by for comfort?

We call our nightstand the Heirloom: originally made in the 1940s by my grandfather (the town cabinetmaker and policeman) for my aunt when she went to college, it somehow ended up with my grandmother in the nursing home; it was my inheritance when she died. It's more a small set of shelves than a nightstand, but that's how we use it. On top is a revolving stack of (semi)current reading. The lower two shelves are the permanent bedside collection.

In the spirit of seasonal of self-examination, here's what's there now. Middle shelf is poetry:
  • The Oxford Book of Travel Verse: poets' impressions of the world, ordered by region; has Hughes's and Plath's poems on a bullfight they watched during their honeymoon

  • The Penguin Book of Renaissance Verse: a fascinating, thematically arranged anthology of Tudor through Restoration poetry, with an introduction bettered only by that of ...

  • The Penguin Book of Victorian Verse: has "Goblin Market" and "The City of Dreadful Night" and "Amours de Voyage"; which would be enough even without the introduction

  • The Oxford Book of English Verse (Gardner edition): one of the two best single-volume general poetry anthologies I've met; and no, the other is not the Ricks edition, but ...

  • The Penguin Book of English Verse: a volume that continues to delight, after a few years' grazing; arranged not by birth date of poet, but publication date of poem

  • The Portable Poets of the English Language: a five-volume anthology with introductions by Auden, a co-editor; if the gatekeeper to the desert island lets you count this as a single book, take it instead -- you won't be sorry

  • Complete Shakespeare: a compact edition used as a textbook by Betty Jobleigh in 1924
The bottom shelf is general reading:
  • Montaigne's Essays: always good for a dollop of wise and witty

  • Plutarch's Lives: though, actually, neither of us has touched this in several years; it's probably due for rotation out

  • The Book of a Thousand Nights and One Night (Burton, 3 volumes): naughty line-art -- 'nuff said.

  • Nicomedian Ethics: one day I'll read it straight through and, like, have finished a book of Aristotle

  • The Practical Cogitator: an anthology of moral/ethical philosophy; also due for cycling out

  • Bible (NRSV)

  • Song of Songs: a facing-page translation by two Jewish poets

  • Faith and Practice (Pacific Yearly Meeting): Quakers don't go in for doctrine, but they do like to document what they do and say

  • Tao Te Ching (Le Guin): yes, Ursula Le Guin translated Lao Tzu, with help from a pony -- graceful English, dubious accuracy


So what do you keep by the bedside?

---L.

Date: 9 January 2005 04:22 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] klwilliams.livejournal.com
I live (and thus sleep) alone, and my bedroom has three bookcases in it, all filled to the brim and over with my TBR pile. (Yes, I read slowly.) I must have over a thousand books in there.

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