Wednesday, January 20, 2010

The Book Thing

I am staying in a room filled with books. In my own bedroom, the books lining the shelves are ones that I have already read. It's comforting to wake up to them and see the familiar titles, remember the tales in each, feel safe in the knowledge that almost all of those books have been read. Here, though, are many books I have not read. It's a bit daunting. As I do in a bookstore or library lately, I stare at the titles unable to decide on one that feels right, that will get through to my psyche in a way that means something, is affecting. Not a dystopian tale, not one with an estranged husband or an already-dead character, not one about unrequited love or love gone sour with no redemption. Anything too peppy or too trite or too philosophical without enough in-scene narrative seems dull as well. Nothing feels right. I stare at the books and think about starting one. It isn't just that I've been lacking in reading time. There's some story I want to read, but I can't quite put my finger on it, can't quite articulate what I'm seeking.

Another case in point. R. and I went to The Book Thing—not a bookstore but a warehouse in Baltimore packed with books. Free books. Hundreds of volumes filled the concrete rooms, and I could not choose. Maybe it was because the building had no heat, and the temperature was in the 20s. The winter air derailed any slow, thoughtful opening of covers and flipping of pages. I could think only about getting warm, which led to frustration about losing the opportunity to take any and as many books as I wanted. (Base needs triumph over intellectual desires every time; the intellect cannot function when the body is too cold.) A sense of being overwhelmed by unlimited choices also plagued me; usually I select only what I really want, for lack of money, for not wanting to waste, to avoid the guilt of an unread stack of reading; too many unopened books waiting in a pile can be unnerving.

Shelves and shelves of books—something I love. It’s just that lately, none seems to get at the right thing. And I realize this: I'm waiting to write the story I want to read. It's hard when life gets in the way and so many other things need taking care of before I can sit down to write. The perfect writing time and writing space is elusive—I must once again learn to create in the in between spaces. This usually works when something is going well, when my mind is fluid and in shape and focused on a project. But now I must restart. It’s like I've been sick for a long time and my body has forgotten how to run with a sense of freedom and strength. It's back to short, flat runs that are slow and cumbersome. Again I must build and build before I will be able to re-cross the pain threshold and remember why I do this at all.

So maybe it’s not a dissatisfaction with the books I have yet to read but a dissatisfaction with the shape of the book I want to write. The stories of others are irritating because none tells it just like I want it to, as I would tell it or see it. Perhaps this awareness will help me to write. Perhaps it is just another quirk in the constantly changing process that is fiction writing, that is living and working and creating. Either way, I keep thinking of something Toni Morrison said: “If there is a book you really want to read, but it hasn’t been written yet, then you must write it.”

—C.

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