Wednesday, August 19, 2020
Our Reading Lives Im Too Scared to Write in My Books
Our Reading Lives Iâm Too Scared to Write in My Books This installment of Our Reading Lives is by Paul Montgomery. Paul writes about comics and what they can do on iFanboy.com. With David Accampo, he co-hosts Fuzzy Typewriter , a podcast dedicated to story, storytellers, art and artists. Iâll generally opt to solve a crossword puzzle in ink, and not just because Iâm the kind of clod who walks away from every encounter with a pencil looking like a retired chimney sweep. As venues for mental calisthenics, crosswords famously keep cloistered nuns alive and cunning until theyâre all but petrified, but they also demand a special kind of arrogance. Especially since no oneâs forcing us to complete them. The mitts come off and the rollerball comes out. Even if it means crossing things out (It does always mean crossing thing out). Because, when it comes down to it, misplaced hubris is my favorite comedic trope. Iâm unable to summon that same brash spirit when Iâm reading. Not in ink. Not even in graphite. Hereâs the thing. I desperately want to. But the prospect terrifies me. I have friends who write in their books, fiction or non. That sentence works even if the modifierâs dangling. Which I suspect it might be. Jess on Gilmore Girls? He wrote in books. And thatâs the chutzpa Iâm talking about. I look at the people who write in their books with the same kind of awed reverence that Sal Mineo applied to James Dean. Which likely says something about my conception of rebellion. No lie, I even used a separate sheet of loose leaf for my Mad Lib responses. I was that bashful kid forced to observe eye contact in terms of a daily quota. Dutiful and compliant, my constant intent was invisibility. So, when Sister Joan (oh, wow, more nuns) called me up to her desk in the waning days of third grade to interrogate me about the grocery list of dirty words sheâd found scrawled in the back of my Social Studies text bookI recall âqeafâ and âpubesâ among the tawdry unmentionables mentionedI was well and truly mortified. I have no recollection of my response, though what I probably wanted to articulate was, âIf youâll look at my record, this isnât really my deal. It was probably one of those heathen CCD kids who use our desks on Thursday nights.â I likely just cried. My teacher eventually deduced that I probably wasnât to blame for defacing a communal text book vulnerable to bawdier sensibilities than my own and all was soon right with the world again. Iâd practice my signature before writing my name in the front of a chapter book, only then when it was required that I label it as specifically my possession. Later in life Iâd compose and submit essays and term papers, my own first stabs at authorship, only to have them return with notes in the margins. If Iâd bungled an argument or misinterpreted some musty philosopherâs thesis, I appreciated my teachersâ annotations. But what of the aced papers? One professor returned an essay with a high grade. Sheâd underlined a passage and wrote âeruditeâ alongside it. I was grateful she liked the line, but I remember wondering for a long time why sheâd chosen to write that word. Because hereâs the other thing. While slipping the surly bonds of my own prudishness to unsheathe my pen upon the untrespassed sanctity of space (to borrow liberally from J.G. Magee) is one obstacle between me and tattooing the face of God (God being Literature with the big L, I guess), reverence isnât the only thing in my way. I also have no idea what Iâm supposed to say. Underlining, I get. Iâve seen it in enough used textbooks and yellowed required reading novels to understand and appreciate a previous readerâs declaration of profundity. Iâll even nod at it. âI totally wouldâve underlined that too. That line is dope.â That said, it genuinely freaked me out when I discovered unbidden underlinings on my Kindle. At first, I thought the dotted lines of emphasis were a glitch in my ereader or the ebook file. Then I realized that these marked passages were things I myself wouldâve noted, given the choice. Had I been sleep-highlighting? Was there some chronically contemplative burglar molesting my ereader each night as I slept? Would this have any affect on my credit score? I eventually gleaned that these notations were popularly underlined quotations, though Iâm still not sure how such things are aggregated or maintained. In a way though, this abnormality has engendered a deeper interest in marking up my own flesh-and-blood books. I want t o underline too. I just donât know what Iâd say. Definitely not âerudite.â Which is a little too cosmopolitan and redundant for me personally. Do I write questions? Do I try to identify the culprit of the crime before itâs revealed in the novelâs resolution? Do I connect things with arrows, and for what purpose? I know, on a molecular level, that important things are being written in margins. I just donât know what those things are and if I, myself, have the capacity to contribute despite a burning desire to cast off my puritanical ideologies and do so. Tempestuously. Because what if I write the wrong thing? What if someone finds my copy of The Yiddish Policemenâs Union or Pulphead at a rummage sale and discovers my annotations? And what if they surmise the darkest truth? That Iâm not nearly so insightful as I think I am? Or worse, that I wasnât nearly so insightful as I thought I was. Because Iâm dead at that point. And even if I could muster a rebuttal to that secondhand reader, I canât muster it at all. Because I canât even muster a pulse. In the end, maybe itâs a more classic fear. Itâs not that Iâm worried about permanence. Itâs the impermanence that kills me.
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