A memoir for the bookish-inclined, using personal stories to demonstrate how books have a magical way to move a person from one stage of life to the next.
“This is a small gem of a book, tender, humble, loving. —Mary Gordon
“Sweeney makes a charming companion, telling stories in joyful reflection.” —Jeff Deutsch, author of In Praise of Good Bookstores
Former bookseller, longtime publisher and author Jon M. Sweeney shows—with history and anecdotes centering around books such as Thoreau’s Journal, Tagore’s Gitanjali, Martin Buber’s Hasidic Tales, and Tolstoy’s Twenty-three Tales—what it means to be carried by a book. He explores the discovery that once accompanied finding books, and books finding us. He ponders the smell of an old volume, its heft, and why bibliophiles carry them around even without reading them. He demonstrates how and why there is magic and enchantment that takes place between people and books.
Table des matières
Prologue
Chapter 1: The Martin Buber Book I Carried While My Marriage Failed
Chapter 2: Three Inches of Hitler in Very Small Hands
Chapter 3: A Means of Escape with My Side of the Mountain
Chapter 4: Forbidden Books for Ordinary Teenage Trauma
Chapter 5: In Search of Wendell Berry and an Expected Life
Chapter 6: Monica Furlong’s Thomas Merton and How to Ruin a Honeymoon
Chapter 7: Finding Tagore in Harvard Square
Chapter 8: Tolstoy’s Twenty-three Tales and Learning to Walk on Water
Chapter 9: Sitting with Swami and The Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna
Chapter 10: Hand-held Devotion (Books with Pictures)
Chapter 11: Sin and Mercy at Brighton Rock
Chapter 12: A Tiny Volume of What’s Impossible
Chapter 13: Carrying Baron Corvo and My Own Petty Animus
Chapter 14: With Patience Like Spring and Thoreau’s Journal
Chapter 15: Ghost Stories as Kids Go Off to College
Chapter 16: Black Elk Speaks and the Mystery of Religious Identity
Chapter 17: Montaigne’s Essays and the Dependability of Change
Afterword: All the Rest and What’s Next
Acknowledgements
Sources and Notes
About the Author
Index