The Right Opinion
A Slow Reader's Lament
Beaches aren't my thing, and reading on beaches even less so. I've never understood how anyone can enjoy a book in the midst of all that sand, glare, and greasy suntan lotion. For reading ambiance, I'll take an easy chair in an air-conditioned room , and leave the damp swimsuits and gritty beach towels to those who appreciate them.
On the other hand, I love the special summer reading lists that newspapers and magazines publish as beach season approaches each year. I love the expanded book sections that appear before the holiday season every winter too. For that matter, I love perusing book reviews and leafing through publishers' catalogs and nosing around in bookstores. And as my wife discovered when she met me, my idea of interior decoration is books on bookshelves, preferably floor-to-ceiling and wall-to-wall. (Her preferences run more to lovingly tended plants, clustered together with rain-forest-caliber density. Negotiations are ongoing.)
I've been a book reader for as long as I can remember, but until I was in college most of the books I read came from -- and went back to -- the library. The books I actually owned as a kid were relatively few. With disposable income, however, the world changed. I realized that the pleasure of reading books was amazingly enhanced by the pleasure of owning books. I liked seeing around me books I had already read; I found it gratifying that my encounter with a book continued even after I'd finished reading it.
But above all there was the delight of anticipation. I snapped up books that intrigued me, that I thought would be good reads, that got great reviews. Alas, I was like a kid whose eyes are too big for his stomach: I kept helping myself to more than I could possibly finish. It didn't help that the older I got, the less time there was for pleasure reading. Or that my ability to acquire books faster than ever -- hello, 1-Click! -- didn't come with the ability to read them any faster.
Ah, if only I could read books as fast as I acquire them! Even half as fast would be a blessing. Even a quarter as fast.
On the floor next to my desk as I write is Peace, They Say, Jay Nordlinger's new history of the Nobel Peace Prize; Surviving Hell, Leo Thorsness's account of his years as a POW in North Vietnamese; and Nicholas Carr's The Shallows: What the Internet is Doing to Our Brains.
I really want to read them.
But I still haven't gotten around to At the Edge of the Precipice, Robert Remini's book on Henry Clay and the Compromise of 1850; All Other Nights, Dara Horn's historical thriller about Jewish soldiers in the Civil War; and Ayaan Hirsi Ali's memoir, Infidel -- and I really wanted to read them, too.
I suppose it's time I faced reality: I'll never catch up on my must-read list. How can I, when they keep publishing books I'm so impatient to read?
William F. Buckley Jr. once described the experience of entering a well-appointed home in which something seemed out of order. It took him a few moments to realize the problem: There were no books. It was jarring, Buckley wrote, to be confronted with the fact that are people in whose lives books play no role whatsoever.
In my life, by contrast, books increasingly seem to play the role of those falling geometric shapes in Tetris. That's the classic video game in which you either clear out the shapes efficiently as they fall, or they stack up so high that no space is left -- and you lose.
It's an old lament of mine that I'm not a fast writer, but to paraphrase Tevye the Dairyman, would it spoil some vast eternal plan if God had made me at least a fast reader? Theodore Roosevelt was able to read, on average, a book a day; when he compiled a list in 1903 of the books he'd read since becoming president two years earlier, it ran to three single-spaced pages. Over the course of an exceptionally busy life, he read thousands of books, many in foreign languages. And, his biographer Edmund Morris notes, TR generally remembered everything he read. Dear Lord, what I wouldn't give for reading prowess like that.
I might even be willing to read on the beach.
(Jeff Jacoby is a columnist for The Boston Globe).

14 Comments
Doktor Riktor Von Zhades in Western KY
Thursday, July 19, 2012 at 9:29 AM
"..my idea of interior decoration is books on bookshelves, preferably floor-to-ceiling and wall-to-wall. (Her preferences run more to lovingly tended plants, clustered together with rain-forest-caliber density."
A nice chance to comment on something other than politics for a moment in time. Mr. Jacoby, one can actually have both. A beautiful combination of God's creations in nature, and His creations of men's mind all in one room.
rab in jo, mo
Thursday, July 19, 2012 at 11:09 AM
Of all the possessions that were lost when a tornado destroyed our home last year, I find I miss my books the most. Seeing that room full of books (many out of print) turned into a mass of moldy, wet paper was frustrating and depressing to say the least. Finances have not allowed me to even begin to replace the books that are still available. I have a Kindle, but it's just not the same.
India in Georgia
Friday, July 20, 2012 at 10:10 AM
I'm sorry to hear that, rab. I pray the best for you and your family.
Ed in Cordova, TN
Thursday, July 19, 2012 at 12:12 PM
My lament too....I'm a slow reader and get overwhelmed walking through a bookstore at all the books I would like to read, but know I can't possibly get around to in this lifetime.
India in Georgia
Friday, July 20, 2012 at 10:17 AM
Yes, it can be a sweet torture to walk through a bookstore. A used book sale and Amazon are even worse.
wjm in Colorado
Thursday, July 19, 2012 at 12:40 PM
The movie is never as good as the Book.
Aaron W Draper in Fresno, CA
Thursday, July 19, 2012 at 7:01 PM
Unless you count Forrest Gump. Horrible read.
Anton D Rehling in Olympia, WA
Thursday, July 19, 2012 at 2:28 PM
My dream room is wall to wall book shelves full of all I have read and those I will read, with room to expand the library a whole lot more, a comfortable recliner and a wood burning fireplace, a small liquor cabinet with small fridge/freezer for mixers and ice. One wall reserved for my firearm collection and a reloading bench. One entry door in from house and another door to exit into my very large workshop for all my welding projects, wood projects and stone carving projects
Alexander Dembski in Bethany, CT
Thursday, July 19, 2012 at 3:45 PM
Wow Anton, you have my dream room pegged perfectly. I built the library with the floor-to-ceiling walls of bookshelves, the reloading bench, the stereo cabinet, and the recliner. Not enough room for the wood stove ( in the family room on the other side of the house, with it's own recliner) or the firearms vault (in the basement workshop). Need to figure out how to expand. Have run out of bookshelves.
Toadroller in Maine
Thursday, July 19, 2012 at 3:49 PM
The liberating beauty of owning books is that you can write in them. With the exception of rare books, which have some market value, the rest are your library, your think tank. Write in them, argue points with the authors, fill them with post-its, and hand them to others in your circle for them to read and carry on the conversation.
pete in CA
Thursday, July 19, 2012 at 10:07 PM
I also was raised with a love of books. When my parents died and we gathered everything together we had more than 3,000 books with only two sets of encyclopedia, all of which one family member or another had read. We contacted libraries to make a donation. Nobody wanted them. We advertised them on ebay and in the local papers. No sales, we held yard sales and sold a few poetry books, but that was all.
I still have the Zane Gray, Louis L'Amour, Bruce Catton, Winston Churchill, Sandbergs Lincoln, WWI, WWII, Civil and Revolutionary war books and a number of other sets. Nobody reads good books any more.
Army Officer (Ret) in Kansas
Thursday, July 19, 2012 at 11:06 PM
Pete,
Consider setting up a seller account on Amazon. The wife and I decided we wanted to use some of the space our book collection was occupying and put a couple hundred books up starting a few weeks ago. About 1/5th of them have been sold already, with one or two more going most every day.
Be competitive with your pricing and you'll free up a lot of shelf space relatively quickly and make a few bucks in the process. And that way your books will go to someone who will actually read them - unlike a donation to a library where most would sit until they turn to dust - if they take them at all.
DJ in Tennessee
Friday, July 20, 2012 at 10:42 AM
Anton, you forgot the cat! A warm, purring cat can add enjoyment to that good read. But, seriously, my gratification now comes from seeing my son's shelves stuffed with books and more stacked on his nightstand. No time was better spent than all those hours we cuddled together reading when he was a child.
Lyna in AL
Saturday, July 21, 2012 at 1:12 PM
What a world of difference there would be if every child sat on the lap of a loving adult with good books! (And a cat at the side for good measure.) My heart cries every time I see our friends' 5 year-old pacified with a hand-held game that is rarely turned off.