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Confessions of a Bookaholic: Bury Me Under a Bookstore

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By patful


Hooked on Hardbacks

I am a bookaholic.

That's the statement I would make if there were a 12-step program for book addicts. But to be honest, I don't want to get rid of the sickness.

In the age of e-books and "kindles", I risk labeling myself as a fossil, a dinosaur, an out-of-touch irrelevance because I still love the way a book feels when I hold a hardback between my two hands. The "feel" of turning pages, of letting my eyes roam over the paragraphs--or in some cases--lines of poetry. Just to show you how sick I am, I even love the way a book smells.

My addiction had early roots in my childhood. My mother stocked the house with all kinds of books--novels, her nursing textbooks, and a special treasure just for me: the multi-volume set of My Book House Books. Volume 1 was filled with nursery rhymes with old-fashioned illustrations. That was a favorite of my pre-school years.

Succeeding volumes, all the way up to No. 12, had stories and poems in graduated levels of reading. These books had hard blue covers, with some gold trim--I still remember them after all these years--and I loved what it felt like to look at the pictures and turn the pages.

My grandmother was an "enabler" in my addiction because she read to me--a lot. I can remember hearing a child's version of "Pilgrim's Progress". I know there were other titles but right now I can't tell you what they were. I was fascinated with the way she would wet her finger to help her turn a page. I wondered why she had to do that. Today I know.

My addiction for books got out of hand (in my mother's opinion) that day in my pre-school life when I opened a hall closet (crammed with all manner of things in no particular order) and pulled out an obstetrics book my mother had kept from her nurse's training.

I think there were diagrams of the unborn baby inside the uterus, and there were probably pictures of babies being born. But I didn't really know what I was looking at, although I'm sure my mother thought I had grasped every graphic detail. I just liked the idea of opening another book, turning the pages and looking at the pictures.

My Aunt Jennie gave me a Christmas gift each year that was always my favorite. I remember that one year it was Louisa May Alcott's book Little Women. Another year she gave me Alcott's book Eight Cousins. Even as a child, I saw a book as a gift that kept on giving. The enjoyment was always available to me. All I had to do was open the covers and start reading.

At my elementary school, I was a regular in the school library where I checked out biographies of famous people: Abraham Lincoln. Clara Barton, Andrew Jackson, Daniel Boone, George Washington, Davy Crockett. I remember that a certain publisher had a series of these life stories, all in bright orange covers. At the ages of 8,9, and 10, I was more than impressed and inspired by these famous people who left their marks in one way or another.

A mark of my third and fourth grade years was the craze that all my girlfriends and I had for books about horses. Black Beauty  was one I remember but there were many others. It seemed so romantic to devour stories of a boy or girl having a special horse to train and ride. I never became an accomplished horseback rider myself, but it sounded so wonderful when I read about it.

Still another book mania for me were the Nancy Drew books in which a very clever, resourceful young woman solved all sorts of crimes (but without references to slashers, ghouls, or semiautomatic machine guns). She drove a "roadster"--which I had no knowledge of, but it sounded like something very cool and hip.

As I grew older and went to college, my addiction worsened. I found myself unmistakably drawn to the magic words of "Book Sale" if I saw them outside a bookstore or written in the store window. Those two words were the equivalent of saying "Have a drink" to a recovering alcoholic. As I moved from one city to another (from a junior college to another college for my last two undergrad years), I transported quite a few books.

But the condition worsened when I graduated from college and packed a car for the drive to Auburn University to begin studies for a master's degree (in English,naturally!) As the years went on, I was shameless, utterly driven, in my quest for more books and more books. There was always ONE more book that I just HAD to have. And joining the Book-of-the-Month Club didn't help my condition, either.

When I married and began having children, my addiction ballooned because I wanted my children to start out life surrounded with good books suitable for their ages. (Later, when my children had children, I bought them books, too.)

As years have passed, I find myself at a new stage of my addiction. I want my books to have good homes so from time to time, I give a certain book to a friend who can enjoy it. I am still surrounded by enough books to maintain my comfort level, but I am trying to wean myself from book sales and to pass along books I have enjoyed to others who can sample and taste them, too.

Reading a book on a computer screen is better, I suppose, than not having a book to read at all. But relic that I am of a bygone age, I shamelessly admit that I love the "experience" of a book. It takes me places I want to go. It lets me meet people I have always wanted to know. And it provides me a legacy to pass along to those I love.

Yes, I am a bookaholic--- who expects one day to look into God's face and say, "So where is the library around here?"




 

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Rose West profile image

Rose West  says:
2 months ago

I'm a bookaholic too! It's good to know I'm not alone. There's just something about a real paper-and-ink book that can never be found in an eBook. My family thinks it's hilarious that I smell books on purpose. Do you ever get the feeling that all you need to be happy is to sit in a corner filled with books? Maybe I need to get out more :)

Feline Prophet profile image

Feline Prophet  says:
2 months ago

Ahh...another book smeller! The first thing I do on opening a book is bury my nose in it, much to the amusement of onlookers! A real book lover would get that, right? :)

I can't imagine a life without books, and I mean the ones made out of paper. I can't even imagine reading a newspaper on the computer screen, leave alone an entire book.

Hello, hello, profile image

Hello, hello,  says:
2 months ago

It's such a lovely written hub. I also have the addiction. Isn't lovely? Thanks for your hub.

patful profile image

patful  says:
2 months ago

Rose and Feline:So I'm not alone in enjoying the fragrance of a book. That picture of sitting in a corner, surrounded with a pile of books, is truly a picture of bliss. Thanks for understanding.

Hello, hello: Welcome to our club. It feels good to have company.

cally2 profile image

cally2  says:
2 months ago

I have the addiction too. Espcially the smell of second hand book shops. I could spend hours in there. I think I have to answer this with a hub of my own. A boys' one.

Godslittlechild profile image

Godslittlechild  says:
2 months ago

After my own heart you are! I love books!

patful profile image

patful  says:
2 months ago

Cally2: I want to read your hub about books. I too love second-hand books. It's like a treasure trove where some time spent "digging" can yield up real jewels.

Godslittle child: Thanks for joining in. Maybe I can get that support group started for bookaholics.

Mit Kroy profile image

Mit Kroy  says:
2 months ago

I've got a couple hundred or so. Reading some for the first time. it's a great habit.

patful profile image

patful  says:
2 months ago

Thanks for checking in. I'll look for you at the Bookaholics Anonymous meeting.

Emily G profile image

Emily G  says:
2 months ago

I am a total book addict too! I read through books like some people go through underwear. I have almost an entire room in my too-small house devoted to them and love just sitting there looking at them all before I pick the one I'm going to read.

patful profile image

patful  says:
2 months ago

Just to show you that I have a similar problem with books, I ran into an issue a few years ago when I moved from one apartment to another. My pastor, helping me move, said, "You won't have room for all those books in your new apartment. We'll store them at the church until you figure out what to do." He was right. If I had tried to move ALL those books, I wouldn't have had room to live in the new apartment. I had to whittle down the quantity...but it wasn't easy. Thanks for being a sister addict.

nrgalloway24 profile image

nrgalloway24  says:
2 months ago

I'm an book addict too and I sniff them often. I have so many there are piles all over the floor that my husband trips on. They are the gifts that keep on giving.

patful profile image

patful  says:
2 months ago

Nrgalloway2: We truly understand each other. The piles on the floor (well, I AM going to get to them sooner or later) is something I can identify with. Thanks for joining the discussion. I wondered if I was a club of one.

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