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Friday 12 February 2010

Blooming holidays!

You’ve decided where to go, booked flights, organised hotels, packed and weighed your bags, sent the cat to longsuffering relatives, persuaded the dog to take up residence in a home with bars across the windows, and all you have to do is make sure you have something decent to read. Simple? No, definitely not!

To Pisa, Italy, I brought three books: one was ok, the second was awful, and the third I had read before (a ghastly mistake) so I set off for the largest bookstore in town. The English section comprised two sets of shelving in which Charles Dickens and Dan Brown featured among the usual chick-lit and dross of the lowest order; I chose the former and spent the remainder of my holiday with Hard Times tucked under my oxter (not a bad choice as it turned out. I can now visualise Miss Haversham at the table of her wedding feast and the genial Pip as he grew up with a cast of the strangest characters). Note to self: plan better next time.

Albuquerque, New Mexico, with five books in tow, none of which I could read on the flight as I was seated next to Bill for the long haul with whom I talked non-stop, laughed, watched the same movie, and left in Chicago with a nod of regret. No sooner landed than I headed for Borders that was full of luscious temptation that I didn’t resist; next was Barnes & Noble, another house of sin for the likes of me. More books to read but still I didn’t manage a single page due to (a) the time difference that had me in bed by eight; (b) so many relatives dying to catch up on old times; (c) the view from the back garden of humming birds flitting around the feeding table; (d) the wonderful dry heat that did me a power of good. I eventually managed to get stuck into Henning Mankell who kept me highly entertained with his grumpy detective, Wallander (who could do with a good holiday himself), and a bloody crime to be solved by fair means or foul.

My flight home was just as fortuitous with Harry, another of Chicago’s sons, for company who helped me carry my suitcase, bursting with unread books, to a waiting bus.

Next week I’m off to Marbella with three gals from the book club for seven days of fun, fun and more fun. We’ve agreed to take two books each to share after reading so basically that’s one book a day if all goes according to plan. It should be enough, but then again, what if none of them are any good??? Oh the trials and tribulations of being too far away from my favourite bookshops and that steady supply of literary surprises growing like sturdy trees beside my bed, on the sideboard, near the couch and strewn on the hall table.

Having a good book to read is like a security blanket for bibliophiles without which we’d turn into nasty, spiteful, frustrated bores longing for an English box of Cornflakes off which to read (as if we needed to know) the ingredients, nutritional value (ha!), country of origin, and other useless information. Reading is reading when it boils down to it and going mad in a world without books doesn’t bear thinking about.

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Saturday 8 August 2009

The Power of Reading

The room would be full of patients waiting for their Methadone, sitting there, bored silly, wasting whole afternoons, nothing to do but wait. One of the doctors decided to create a sort of library; the others in the clinic agreed to bring in books, leave them in the waiting room, see if anyone showed an interest. Patients could read while they sat, borrow, or keep - whatever they fancied.

It worked a treat: now, everyone sits and reads: true crime and crime fiction always popular but modern fiction, non-fiction, the classics, all sorts, all appreciated. Some leave with a book tucked under their arm, a sight for sore eyes, says the doctor.

Last week, I watched a programme about recovering addicts in Ireland: brave people who went under the camera, exposing their weaknesses, summoning up such willpower to overcome their particular deadly temptation. One handsome young man sat reading Shantaram in the garden, a book I recognised, full of wild and dangerous exploits. It made me smile as he read tales of another country brought alive in Roberts semi-autobiographical prose.

We read for all kinds of reasons, we read for pleasure, we identify with human experience, we read to escape into another world. For some that is the world of Sense and Sensibility or The Diary of an Edwardian Lady; for others it is wild drug taking, heroin addiction, jail breaks and splashes of madness in India.

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