As a lover of all things word-related, one
of my favourite pastimes, of course, is settling down to read a good book. What
I love about this experience also, however, is the different ways in which one
can come to the act of reading itself. Foremost, at least for me, is the
book-you-have-been-saving experience: more often than not this is heralded by
the new release of a favoured author’s latest hardback, and might find me
either legging it to my nearest bookshop on the release date of the title, or -
at least in yonder days before I became a travelling library – see me squatting
on my doorstep in anticipation of the postman delivering it from Amazon, having
ordered it months in advance. A new A.M.
Homes, Paul Auster or Haruki Murakami falling into my clammy
paws always has the self-same exhilarating effect - a strange mix of heady
anticipation at the potential verbal delights to come, countered by slight
hesitancy: for picking the perfect moment to begin such a book is almost as
important as the act of reading it itself. Sitting on such a title until that
deadline, that appointment, that can’t-be-cancelled meeting has passed is
really one of the most difficult things to do, and requires some
self-discipline.
As with any of my other favourite authors (Graham Greene, José Saramago – I could go on but I’d better stop here for now…)
encountering a new literary world of a well-loved and remembered author-consort
is something which, when it comes to dipping a toe in the tide, or hurling
myself off the proverbial linguistic cliff, I find the cliff winning out every time
– and what a wonderful dash it often is. Engaging in such an encounter
requires, above all else, free time, and the opportunity to lend oneself to the
world of an author’s characters, their lives and their living. For it is when
you are truly submerged in this world of the other I believe, that you are most
able to forget, and yet find, some parts of yourself. This is the mark of both
a good book and a great author one might take the time to argue, if one wasn’t
still engrossed in finishing off the final chapter - perhaps with a cup of tea
by one’s side ready to redress the inevitable frisson of bittersweet elation,
at the finality of completing such a book.
Meanwhile, an unexpected brush with a
never-before-read author can be a whole other revelatory relishing. The
accidental encounter, whether by word of mouth, bookswap, “bookcrossing,” a
book club, or literally having one thrown at one’s feet (or, in the case of how
I came to meet Haruki Murakami’s books – being hit on the head by one falling
from a Hong Kong library shelf) invigorates and quickens both the head and the
heart. When with it comes the knowledge that this is a literary landscape hitherto
untouched – well, something joyful and almost child-like in me begins to jump
up and down with expectant excitement. For there is nothing else as the
awareness that, at some indefinable future date, you and this new intimate may,
once more, meet.
Posted by: Sara Wingate Gray