The Gutenberg
Elegies by Sven Birkerts is a reader’s autobiography and a lament for the
lost importance of literature. I’m not
sure I’ve read all 14 chapters, but I love chapter six so much, I wish I had
written it. Called “The Shadow Life of
Reading,” Birkerts reflects on the relationship between our mind in a book and
our mind away from the book, a relationship that intrigues me, puzzles me,
amazes me, and moves me.
I just recently
finished Room by Emma Donoghue, a novel that describes the life of a young
woman imprisoned in a 11 x 11 windowless room by an abductor. The story is told through the voice of her
five year old son Jack. Jack was born in
captivity and has never been outside the room.
The reader could focus on the hideousness of the crime that brought and
keeps Jack and his mother in the room, but it is written in such a way that the
reader can also focus on how the two perceive the world through their
restrictive lenses. I never managed to
really imagine myself in their shoes, but I did get so immersed in what
it was like for them; it was as if I had entered another world. And at times, when I wasn’t reading the book,
something would happen to suddenly thrust me back into the world of Jack and
his mother.
Birkerts says,
When we read, we
create and then occupy a hitherto nonexistent interior locale. Regardless of what happens on the page, the
simple fact that we have cleared room for these peculiar figments we now
preside over gives us a feeling of freedom and control. No less exalting is the sensation of inner
and outer worlds coinciding, going on simultaneously, or very nearly so.
Birkerts doesn’t
completely describe these two worlds as they exist for me. Maybe no one can. But he acknowledges it and attempts to
describe it with words. For me, this is
reassuring and exciting. My intuition
tells me that the better I can describe this sensation of living in a book, the
deeper I will experience it. Birkerts
goes on to explain that this world exists not only as I read but after I put
the book down, hence his title “The Shadow Life of Books.” He says, once he has opened the gate into
that “ulterior realm,” he has entered a “place I will at least partially
inhabit as I go about my daily tasks.”
Later he says, “Now I have occupied the book and the book has begun to
occupy me…I carry the work everywhere…for the duration of my reading—and maybe
less vividly after—I will shift between two centers of awareness…I find the
back-and-forth movement—an abstract sort of friction—invigorating.”
Reading Room,
I found myself returning to the room while dealing with outer world of daily
life. This visit to the inner world of a
book is somewhat like visiting a new country where I can enjoy the experience
all the while knowing that a part of me is outside it. There is too much about this place that I
don’t understand. But I treasure the
shadow life of both my travels to new lands and travels to new books.
It’s not
surprising that some novels create a more memorable shadow than others. Some novels may be hard to put down as I rush
on to find out what will happen next.
But when I put the book down to enter again the outer world, the shadow
is faint, and when I get to the end of the book, when I finally find out what
happened, there is no shadow left at all. There have been a few times in my life that I
was so taken over by the world in the book that I had to read it again.
Right now, I’m
trying to figure out why some books leave such a big shadow and some
don’t. Does a vivid shadow mean the book
had value beyond entertainment? I
somehow think it does, but I’m not sure why.
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo left a big shadow for me. But I can’t figure out its value beyond
entertainment. Maybe it is like a vivid
dream. I may not know where it came
from, but something in my psyche thinks I need this story. Right now, I want to read novels that leave a
strong and vivid shadow. That’s how I’ll
continue to study this phenomenon.
2 comments:
Very interesting post. I know that dreams sometimes do this for me, so much so that it is hard to wake up because it feels as if there is "unfinished business" in the dream I must return to. I have't thought a lot about books doing that, but it makes perfect sense to me. I wonder the books with a big shadow for us are ones in which we have some unfinished business in a symbolic way, the way one works with dreams except it is the book we have entered in which we are dealing with archetypal truths for us?
Elaine, thanks for posting. It's intriguing isn't it? And I can't put it into words.
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