Harry succeeds in forcing a public hearing on the issue, “reveal[ing] himself to all the world as nothing more than a local crank.” His wife does not understand his stubborness, saying that it is “not natural for a man to care so much about a house. . . .” When the day comes to vacate, Harry phones the moving company and cancels the vans. Isabel is appalled; she cannot believe her husband has done something so stupid. And after a little more narrative business, it comes to pass that both Harry and Isabel realize that “all decisions, from that moment, were over for them.” They will be seen over, watched over, the important questions decided for them, as if they were “foolish old people.”
It is appropriate that only the old saying would stick with me from the story, which strikes me as strained and unlikely upon rereading. But the old saying is much in my mind as I prepare to pack up my books and belongings and move out of the

And now, instead of enjoying my last days in the wood-paneled sanctum, I must obtain bids from moving companies, arrange to shut off utilities, change addresses on magazine subscriptions, and plot a 1,200-mile route to a new city, a new house, a new array of shelves for my books. I can’t write about them as much as I would like for sorting through them, consigning as many as possible to the yard-sale pile, and recording the remainder for insurance purposes. Moving some of them again, I might as well burn them. But I can’t. I just can’t.
I seem to remember something about a router being purchased for the construction of shelves. Are these them?
ReplyDeleteNo, I built a six-shelf, four-foot-wide bookcase for the master bedroom with it. It now houses part of my British collection.
ReplyDeleteThen why are you leaving?
ReplyDeleteIt must be heartbreaking to leave such a perfect room behind. I would grieve over that loss for a long time...sorry, not trying to make you feel worse.
ReplyDeleteIf you're looking to unload, say, a set of OEDs, I'll take them off your hands. What with them being so bulky and all, it just wouldn't seem right to truck them across the country; it'd simply kill your gas mileage.
ReplyDeleteThen why are you leaving?
ReplyDelete“[N]ew city, new house, new array of shelves”—and new jobs.
Tommish,
ReplyDeleteMy copy of the OED is the old compact version. My only real “bulky” “set” is the Eleventh Edition of the Encyclopedia Brittanica, rightly described by Robert Grudin as the “queen of books.” Nobody is getting those twenty-nine volumes.
But I can let you have an entire run of Paul Elmer More’s Shelburne Essays, in a reprint edition, for not too damn much.
I remember that phrase from Benjamin Franklin. From whom he got it, I've no idea. If I recall correctly (and that would be a miracle), his saying was "three removes equals a fire." Skip the yard sale and give to Goodwill or a local resale shop that serves the challenged. The books then will have made a double/triple blessing.
ReplyDeleteThat's a beautiful library! I'm sorry you have to leave it.
ReplyDeleteCondolences on losing the library. It is beautiful. But, I hope you eventually have an even better one in your new locale.
ReplyDeleteCongratulations on the new jobs! I hope the new city is to your liking as well.
That is a great library sir. I'm sorry you have to leave it.
ReplyDeleteLibraries owe as much to their creators and users for their charm as they owe to books. I am hopeful that you can recreate this special place in another house.
At the risk of sounding like a ghoul or funeral chaser, are you really having a yard sale? This is indeed sad.
ReplyDeleteAs a writer, a book I love is as much a companion to me as a person. Could you maybe think of leaving them as passing them on to other people--to be discovered?
ReplyDeleteOh my God, that is such an absolutely beautiful Library...
ReplyDeleteWishing you all the best, in your moving woes!