I bought another book I didn’t need today. It called to me from the stack at the used bookstore. I popped in (against my better judgement and against the wisdom of my wallet), thinking I could poke around and leave without buying anything. I should’ve known better.
It was a paperback copy of Annie Dillard’s An American Childhood.
I reasoned for a moment: You’ve already read this. You do not need to buy this.
But I knew even as I held its soft covers in my hands that I would buy it. That I should have my own copy. You really shouldn’t keep recommending a book that you don’t own. At least, that’s what I told myself as I went up to the cash register.
When I think of this book, I see myself on the train. I’m holding a hardcopy from the library, and I’m reading as the brakes squeak and smash me against the side of the train (this happened only a few times, I’m sure, but in my mind it was a constant interruption). I consumed this book with a fervor that surprised me; I’d tried reading Pilgrim at Tinker Creek the year before and I’m pretty sure that I will never get further than three pages into it.
There is something to be said for timing.
Dillard’s book spoke to me from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where a little blonde girl discovered the world and her place in it. I was a barely-bigger blonde girl, interning at a large publishing house for the summer before heading back to college. I rode the train every day, and every day I thought Is this what will happen to me? as I watched middle-aged men and women silently board the train, silently ride the train, and silently get off. Was this what life had in store?
“I discovered myself and the world, and forgot them, and discovered them again”
― Annie Dillard, An American Childhood
[a poem wrote itself hurriedly on the back of a receipt from lunch. it was about being little and memories and contradictions. it was born out of Annie Dillard and the receipt is still in a book somewhere.]
The train moving forward, the hardcover book in my hands, my feet propped up on the runner. My stomach growling because I hadn’t packed a big enough lunch (again!), and my mind wandering to my senior year of college and what the heck am I doing and what the heck am I gonna do? The city slowly slipping away behind me and Annie’s world opening up.
“In short, I always vowed, one way or another, not to change. Not me. I needed the fierceness of vowing because I could scarcely help but notice…that it was mighty unlikely.”
― Annie Dillard, An American Childhood
There was too much of me in her and it scared me. How important is it to be unique? I started hoping it wasn’t too important, because my uniqueness was being written away.
Every day I went into the city and every day I worked in a little gray cubicle. The words began to blur on the screen, blur on the page, blur in my mind. I longed for my lunch hour when I could take my little peanut butter and jelly sandwich (yay for cheap meals!) and eat in the gardens and watch poor unsuspecting people and yell at audacious squirrels. I loved words. I loved learning about publishing. But not talking for eight hours a day WAS KILLING ME.
So I escaped to Annie.
“As a child I read hoping to learn everything, so I could be like my father. I hoped to combine my father’s grasp of information and reasoning with my mother’s will and vitality. But the books were leading me away. They would propel me right out of Pittsburgh altogether, so I could fashion a life among books somewhere else.” ― Annie Dillard, An American Childhood
Annie Dillard was to my 21-year-old self what Joan Didion was to my 23-year-old self. It’s all about timing. Who knows? Maybe I wouldn’t love either of them if they’d switched places.
~ ~ ~
So I bought another book I didn’t need. I think I bought it for the memories as much as anything; they’re all wrapped up inside. The book’s sitting beside me without a line or mark in it. Who reads their own paperback without marking it up? I don’t understand it. I can’t wait to get my hands on a pen.
Dillard! I first met her work my senior year of high school, and she was the second author (after Hardy) who made me deeply believe in the beauty and power of words.
Since when do we buy books because we *need* them? If they are books we love, that justifies having them close, doesn’t it? (… says the girl whose books overflow shelves and desks and dressers…) Sometimes all it takes is holding a book to know, suddenly, that against my better judgment I am going to buy this book, because it feels right to hold it. How do books have this ability to make me act according to feelings instead of sense?
And now you can lend it to people when you recommend it, instead of just suggesting they check the library. 🙂
I’m so glad you love her! Actually, I think I have one of her books you lent me…kicking around somewhere…
No, I shouldn’t beat myself up about it. I think I just wasn’t shocked, that’s all. Duh, I bought another book. Duh. You know what I mean? But I don’t really regret it 🙂
And it’s funny what things connect us with our feelings, isn’t it?!
This is a lovely post! Your words (as much as the words from my beloved books) paint a picture of exactly what reading can do for all of us. Keep writing!
Thanks, Shellie! I know from your posts that you have the same type of experiences. Thanks for stopping by!