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Franz Kafka? Just Look Next to Dave Barry Consequently, my frustration with coloring books led to
my love of those other books-- books of text, books where there was no need to
reach into my box of many colors and experience near catatonic trepidation. This
romance with the bound word led me to my current undertaking-- born from a
concept that I happened on, you might say, not unlike how Isaac Newton
discovered the laws of gravity. It came to me after installing new bookshelves above the desk in my den. I noticed that the books appeared to overwhelm the shelves-- what with the white brackets, white shelves, and white walls contrasted against the dominating colors of the book jackets. This color scheme made my installation appear somewhat shaky, and it occurred to me that a loosened screw or two could send an avalanche of books from the top shelf crashing down on me.
Concerned, I removed the books and stacked them back on
the floor. I thought about putting my paperbacks on the upper tiers, but there's
a total of twenty-four feet of new shelving. That's room for more than two
hundred books, and organizing according to book-weight would not be an efficient
way of finding anything. I sat amidst the stacks of books-- some three hundred--
thinking of ways to arrange them that wouldn't leave me suffering a concussion. However, this very silliness gave me the more practical
notion of arranging my books, my thriving community of authors, by how each
might complement the other. To allay my fear of an avalanche I reinforced the
brackets with larger screws and then tackled the books. I put Dave Barry next to Franz Kafka: Dave to extract
an occasional chuckle out of the gloomy Franz, and Franz to maybe drag the
frolicking Dave out of puberty. I ran into trouble with the vitriolic Dorothy
Parker and put her aside until I could find a few thick-skinned authors, but
when I found G. B. Shaw and Voltaire I felt I had brought together a pretty good
threesome. Would Emily Dickinson want any company? I tried
placing her-- albeit, a slim volume-- next to the gregarious Whitman who was
standing erect on the second shelf, but to my disappointment Emily tilted away
from Walt and dropped to the shelf in a dead faint. This was not as easy as I had thought. I paced the den, weaving mindfully through the two hundred or so remaining authors who were waiting to be placed, and finished the day after spending an inordinate amount of time weighing the possibility of introducing the King James Bible to the I Ching. Sweat trickled down my forehead as I pondered the many contributors of both, and, what was worse, the anonymity of most of the authors-- a difficult placement task for even the most scholarly of theologians.
I suppose I should've foreseen the Herculean task ahead
of me, but, I thought, if I'm to commit myself to this initiative, then all the
books in the den should be part of the same system. I therefore removed the
books from the other shelves that flanked my den and sat among them, counting.
The tome-tally came to eight hundred and fifty-three-- excluding magazines, six
personal notebook journals, and a dog-eared New York subway map. It's been a few months since I started this project,
and I've been spending the better part of my waking hours in the den. My wife
has established a regimen of bringing my lunch, carefully setting the tray down
on four towers of selected, neatly stacked books that I had erected-- selections
that I know will try my organizational skills and will remain idle until I'm
near completion. Oddly, she's yet to ask about my semi-seclusion. It's probably
just as well since I'd be hard put to give a satisfactory answer-- her being a
Dewey Decimal kind of woman. This morning was quite productive. I found it easy to
find a place for my self-help books. In one fell swoop I relegated them to the
den's darkest corner. I did this with little remorse, since, among other failed
attempts at perusing them for self improvement, I'm still uncomfortably
overweight and have yet to cease my nail biting. As of today, my efforts left me with a mere four
hundred and twenty-four books still waiting for homes. The afternoon was a bit
troublesome, though. From noon until the late day shadows crept across the last
of my shelved books, I scrupulously examined two authors, but I just couldn't
decide, in good conscience, if I should put Scott and Zelda together again.
The author (left) caught in a heated discussion with Woody Allen. Courtesy: Madame Tussaud's Wax Museum
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