The
weather cools further: this time I may have the French door open, but I do not
have the small fan on. By such things
one measure the descent to the depths of autumn and on to winter! I am also doing up my coat when I go for my
second bike ride, rather than leaving it unzipped.
On my bike ride to Gavà on the beach side
paseo, I see more evidence of the removal of the last of the temporary chiringuitos,
a true commercial indication of the changing of the seasons. But, in spite of all these portents, the
weather remains generally fine, and I have not had to take the car to my early morning
swim, so far!
Although my timing for my swim is exact,
the time that I leave for my bike ride to Gavà differs, depending on whether I
have written anything of consequence in my notebook, or if I am engaged in
conversation with people in the café, but seemingly at whatever time I leave,
there are the Unknown Regulars that I pass or am passed by.
The start of Autumn sees the re-emergence
of all the retired folk who have been nudged off their parts of the paseo by
the summer visitors and the kids. Now
that the kids are (mostly) back in school there is a sort of spaciousness to
the beach area which is being reclaimed by those of a certain age. Some of them (us?) are defiant in their
appearance and their actions, relentlessly throwing themselves into the cooling
waters of the Med or parading along the paseo in temperature-ignoring wispy
coverings and pretending that the summer is still with us.
There are plenty of cyclists, many of whom
are in Lycra and, at first glance, look to be common or garden wearers of that
revealing material, but a more searching look shows that the costumes are
holding the riders together rather than making them more aerodynamic! But that is to be commended. Just as TV series are now ‘colour blind’ when
it comes to casting, so clothing is ‘body-blind’ – you wear what you want and
the fit is what you decide it is, rather than having to make reference to some
sort of unobtainable body-ideal that can only be achieved by self-inflicted
starvation or torture in the gym!
You can see where this is going. It will end up with my justifying anything in
a reductio ad absurdam that (in spite of the poor Latin) will allow me
to feel smug!
Enough!
I
find that I am oppressed not by the number of books that I have, but rather their
weight. I have lived with ‘too many
books’ since I was a kid, so that in my smallish bedroom I had to be careful
when I awoke as the shelves on my bedside wall, actually stretched over the bed
itself, so that I slid out of bed rather than rose from it!
There was never enough space and gradually
every room in the house became, as my mother would phrase it, “infested” with
books.
The move from Cardiff to Catalonia was
beset with problems because of the number of books that had to be housed (or
flatted) and not all of my prized possessions made it onto new shelves in my
new country, but an inordinate number of IKEA Billy Bookcases later and a
substantial number of the books found a space.
Not that the space was coherent, as the moves from Cardiff, to storage,
to flat, to releasing more storage, to house meant that an overall system was
never really imposed on my books and in the various rooms of the house there
are now what you could describe as “colonies” of like-minded books forming
interesting islands of partial coherence but separate from an over-arching
empire of classification.
I must admit that I have got used to the disparate
nature of my literary holdings and quite enjoy the serendipitous discovery of a
long-lost volume tucked somewhere where it has not logical reason to be. Some of the juxtapositioning of some of my
books simply looks far too contrived to be aleatory, but I assure you that
however pretentious the shelf might look to the outside eye, it is what it is
by luck rather than intention!
The problem that I am presently wrestling
with is to do with the placement of new books.
In spite of the lack of available space, that has in no way hindered my
purchase of new volumes that I “need”.
And sometimes “need” is augmented by “bargain” – in the sense of value
for money.
I try and tell myself that I have no
problem in paying an inordinate amount of money for a decent seat in the Opera,
but I would hesitate to pay the same amount of money for a book. Even though books, I have to admit, have
given me more (if different) pleasure than Opera. I can pay a triple figure sum for a seat for
a momentary experience, but not pay the same amount for something that can give
lasting tangible pleasure.
I am not the sort of person to pay vast
sums of money for a first edition. The
first editions I have were bought because I bought the books when they came out
first. I do have a 1702 edition of
Swift, but that was an unexpected gift and not something that I bought for
myself.
My problem was that Taschen Books had a
sale.
Taschen Books is an imprint that produces
spectacularly impressive volumes as well as what you might call domestic books,
but their key, or one of their USP is in producing books that are large, opulent,
and very heavy.
In the on-line sale I bought a number of these
books which, when they were delivered, it was impossible to carry them all upstairs
at the same time. It is also difficult
to hold them and if you rest them on your knees, they crush them. They are ‘table’ books and, when they are
opened up, they need a big table to accommodate them.
At the moment they form an arty looking
pile by the side of my chair, looking almost like a stage prop of a pile of
large books. The trouble is that I have
nowhere to put them.
A set of my large art books are in an
extra open section that I have attached to the top of a whole series of Billy
Bookcases. But these books are too big
to fit into those oversized shelves and anyway, the idea of reaching up and
bringing one of them down to reader level without doing irreparable harm to yourself,
or at least breaking an arm or a hand is not to be considered.
Their weight is too great when they are
put on any domestic normal shelf for it to survive. They have to be put at the base of the
bookcase, but it means taking out two shelves to fit them in – and I simply do
not have the room to rearrange without (perish the thought) actually getting
rid of some of my books.
So, they sit there at the moment, like a
monument, waiting for life to rearrange itself so that they can be enjoyed.
I have spent my life, giving preference to
books, and I am girding my literary loins to Find A Solution.
The books will win. They always win!