Many people, myself among them, feel better at the mere sight of a book.
—Jane Smiley
•••
Call it insecurity, an unwillingness
to part with old friends—though
I have, lots of them.
Still, so many remain bookshelved
throughout the house, stacked in spots,
too. Some exist only in book form—
poetry mostly—or classics that I held
in much younger hands. I know we have
to part, old friends,
I think as I put handfuls into boxes bound
for the library resale shop. Thank you,
I whisper. I hope that fresh hands
will open and new eyes adore you,
as I have. I’ve already bequeathed most
of the Shakespeare
to an English teacher friend, but the
P.G. Wodehouse—some first editions—
I still pull off the shelf
now and again, chucking at Bertie
Wooster’s silliness as Jeeves swoops in
to rescue his employer
again and again. It’s the “again”
that means that I will likely die with
a goodly number of these books
hugging these shelves—the ones he
built in my office when we moved into
this house, some of them
bowed with age and weight. But oh,
the worlds they hold, the language
of long-dead writers
singing from these pages,
a familiar choir softly humming
keeping me company as I type—
may it never stop.


Oh Jan….I know. I know! And as for younger hands reading these books….our son, Jesse, 32, recently bought his first dog and named him Bertie. Both of our boys re-read Wodehouse. Blessings on your books, the singing you hear from the pages, those who wrote those songs, and your own compositions. XO , Susie
Yes, yes! It’s the same here at our home…. and it’s all my fault. 😁
I, too, could be considered a book hoarder. It comforts me to see them displayed throughout my house. They are precious friends.