For the unemployed job
seekers in Barbara Ehrenreich’s Bait and Switch, keeping busy became an end in itself. For business
owners and employees of all stripes, at all levels—from the tiniest to the most
monstrous in size—being too busy can be more a problem than a solution. I heard
it again on Saturday from the man who paused long enough in front of my book
display at the Best for Kids Bake Sale and Bazaar to tell me, “I don’t have
time to read books.” Really? I could as easily say that I don’t have time to
bake cookies or join a yoga class. For most of us, though, the truth is that we
find time for the things we really want to do. We all make different choices,
that’s all.
It was a rainy weekend. It
would have been a perfect weekend to stay at home in bed with a pile of books,
on retreat from the world! There was, however, the sale on Saturday, and we
also had very welcome visitors to our home overnight. So after a full day on
Saturday, our whole crowd going to the Happy Hour for dinner, and then
breakfast to be gotten for all on Sunday, my weekend reading time had to be
stolen. And steal it I certainly did.
First, I took a book with me
to the sale. My feeling (and I could be wrong about this) is that too many idle
vendors standing eagerly in front of their displays often frighten off
potential buyers. I don’t want to be unfriendly and aloof, of course, so I’d
stand for a while, smile at those passing, greet people I knew, welcome those
who stopped, ask them (if they began looking at books in earnest) if there was
a particular age they were shopping for, etc. But during those times during the
day when it seemed that vendors and volunteers (sadly) outnumbered shoppers, I
gave my feet a break and escaped into Tony Judt’s memoir essays. Can’t say I
got a lot of reading done, but even a paragraph of Judt’s
exquisite prose is as refreshing as a poem. I even managed to inspire in one
shopper a desire for the book I was reading!
(“Would I like it?” she
asked. “Do you like trains?” I asked her. She loved trains. Yes, she will love
this book, though she’ll be reading it on a plane to California.)
One of my successful
strategies for stealing time is to get up before daylight. As I say, we went
out for dinner with our houseful of company on Saturday evening. After we came
home and sat around sociably until bedtime (ours, that is), they went out
again. This meant a quiet house in the morning when I got up to make coffee and
get cozy with my book. Having promised myself Spirits and Wine as a Sunday treat (doesn’t that sound just perfect?),
I had a nice, long stretch with the novel before I had to lay it aside to start
oatmeal and mix pancake batter. Then later in the day I got back to it and shut
the world out again.
Sarah the Dog always needs to
go outside for a run. Laundry is a never-ending task. Grocery shopping the way
we do it (the European method, i.e., almost daily) takes a bite after bite out
of one’s life. But like my friends who wouldn’t dream of going a week without
an aerobic workout and/or a session with weights, I find it hard to imagine any
significant stretch of days without the pleasure of reading books—and if I have
to steal the time to read, that’s what I’ll do.
What I won’t do is tell you much more about the story line of Spirits
and Wine. You already know there’s a
ghost and a mystery. You know the story takes place in a little town on Lake
Michigan. You know there’s a connection with wine. Beyond that, I am going to
keep mum, so as not to spoil a single surprising twist in the story as it
unreels for you, the eager reader!
You do remember, I hope, that
Susan will be at Dog Ears Books on Friday? That’s at 5 p.m. And if you’re both
an early riser and a television watcher, you can catch an interview with her on
TV 7&4 on Tuesday morning. The show is “Writer’s Minute,” and it airs at
6:25 a.m., though the interview should actually run about three minutes.
My calendar shows me that I
have a 9 a.m. meeting on Monday. Looks like I’ll have to get up pretty early to
get in reading time and dog walk.
3 comments:
Exactly why I'm reading blogs at 6...Katie and I get up early to have some time to ourselves before the crazies begin. Plus she has to go out. Sounds like you had a lovely weekend.
Dogs are good for that, aren't they--getting a person up and out first thing. Books are good for showing a person a different landscape, singing a different song in an unfamiliar voice. Booksellers have a gift for discerning what new country of the mind a particular reader will enjoy. Thank goodness for all of them, else writers would all be filled with despair all the time.
But where would any of us be, readers and bloggers, without writers of books? I shudder to think!
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