summer postcards — call the library

library, cardigan

When I was a kid the local library was a kind of household guru where not only the books were revered but also anyone who answered the phone. My dad’s mantra, call the library!, used whenever he was stumped by one of my questions and didn’t feel like guessing. And it wasn’t a suggestion… but delivered as a godsend solution, a way of contacting The Oracle itself. And while I don’t remember any of the calls, what I asked, what they answered (and there were many calls) I have the feeling they always came through. Wait. I remember one call. I’d received a chain letter warning me to make X number of copies… or else. Heaps of carbon paper and cramped fingers would have been involved not to mention I didn’t know enough people to send them to. Still, I didn’t want the ‘or else’ fate so asked my dad what to do and, erring on the side of caution, he decided The Oracle would probably know how to proceed and if they didn’t no one would. As it turned out, The Oracle was brilliant, I can still feel the relief in my ten year old self. Just send out a couple letters to cover your bases, they said. Maybe I’m paraphrasing. But only slightly. The Oracle never minced words.

A library is a medicine cabinet. What can heal one person may not work at all for somebody else.

—Sandra Cisneros, A House of My Own

Long postcard.

But, books.

I was speaking the other day with a friend about home library/bookshelf organization, the categories we have and I loved hearing the sameness and difference of her method to mine. For the record, mine is alphabetical and separate categories. A small room lined with thrift shop and IKEA shelving holds the majority. Novels and short stories get separate spaces. Non-fiction is divided into four categories: essays, memoir, biographies, general info. There’s a poetry shelf. One for gardening (two categories: essays and how-to). Another for nature, generally. A Canada shelf. An anywhere-but-Canada shelf, which mostly includes Florida, Austria, and a tiny island in the Caribbean. A shelf for my favourite children’s books. A small, pared down, collection of literary journals. A shelf of miscellaneous wotnots including greek mythology and holistic cat care. Dictionaries and writing related books live in my office. Art books are in a second sitting room. All food related books are in the kitchen. Yoga and anything I find inspirational, lives on a small bookshelf in my bedroom.

I used to know someone who refused books as gifts because her shelves ONLY held books of the same size and specific colours. Note: used to know.

I often wonder at the origins of a person’s bookish habits, The What and How of what we keep and Why. And, our love of books to begin with, is it a nurture or nature thing, the fact of growing up with many books or almost none, of being read to daily or never being read to, that makes a difference or is there some other mystery involved? Not sure if it qualifies as an origin story, but here’s mine.

me, cardigan

2 thoughts on “summer postcards — call the library

  1. Loved all of this Carin. Will send photos of my book shelves one day, but you might be appalled.

    Your origin story made me think of summers where I was still allowed to sit in the backyard and we read Reader’s Digest Condensed books. It’s where I first read Jaws, and Stephen King’s ‘IT’. I used to order books on world history from Time Life books…my mother thought it was the stupidest thing ever. I just recently donated them to the goodwill. Hopefully some kid will cut them up and make collages.

    My parents never read to me, and not sure where I got the book fever from, but it was, and still is an addiction. My mother had some old fairy tale books with the old, gruesome tales. Lots of blood. I read The Morte d’Arthut, and some magnificent librarian introduced me to to the Anansi books. I wish I could thank her now. I think books for me, we’re an escape, an alternative universe; and if I could rest there awhile, then I could back to my world. Probably true for many. A form of dissociation, which in try to govern better now.

    Do you crochet? A woman I follow who teaches crochet is coming to PEI fibre festival (?!) and it sounds rather neat. I’ll include the link.

    https://peifibrefestival.com/

    Love your stories, your thoughts. Miss our teas and your lovely face. Hope all is well, or good enough.

    Love and hugs,

    Cathy

    Who organizes books by colour and only the same size? They are the worst kind of imposter.

    1. I love that this brought all that back to you! I can almost see you reading those condensed books in your backyard. Such a specific memory, I can sense how closely you embrace it. (By the way, we had a few of those books too! I don’t think I ever read them though because they looked too academic to my young mind.) Your childhood reading/book experiences sound a lot like mine. Interesting isn’t it, how even without coming from a literary world or being read to, we become bookish.

      Yes I crochet! And you’ve reminded me of the fibre festival. Must look up dates.

      I’m so happy to see you here. I also miss those teas and lattes, and you, too. xo

      (And you are right about the book imposters; the person I used to know couldn’t actually discuss a book, only reference that they’d read it. So there ya go.)

      love and hugs to you!

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