The Reading Life: Vacation reading
Next week, my kids and I will be flying east to Massachusetts, to spend a week with extended family on Cape Cod. It’s a trip we make every summer, to a rambling old house on a bluff overlooking the Atlantic, and yet each year as we get ready I can’t help but feel a certain low-level anxiety.
Partly, the cause of this is family; partly, the act of leaving home. But more than anything, my tension involves a question with which I’ve grappled since childhood: Which books should I bring?
I am, after all, a peripatetic reader, although I read for a living as well. I like choices, which means I always carry more books than I need. And yet, the necessities of travel (not to mention an aging back) dictate that these books can’t be too heavy, or take up too much space. What’s a reader to do?
One solution, of course, would be an e-reader. But while I go on the road with (and occasionally read on) an iPad, I like the reassurance of ink on paper. When I travel, then, it is in the company of a small library, print and digital.
So, what am I bringing to the Cape this summer? First are three books about walking, for a project I’ve got in the works: Bruce Chatwin’s “The Songlines,†which I’ve read but need to revisit; Michael Cunningham’s “Land’s End: A Walk in Provincetown†(if the shoe fits); and Robert Walser’s “The Walk.â€
Then, several works of fiction: Stewart O’Nan’s novel of a disintegrating marriage, “The Odds: A Love Storyâ€; Delmore Schwartz’s short story collection “In Dreams Begin Responsibilities,†recently reissued; Seicho Matsumoto’s Japanese noir “Pro Bonoâ€; and Paul Tremblay’s new novel “Swallowing A Donkey’s Eye,†which looks like “Animal Farm†refracted through a Terry Gilliam-style lens.
Last, there’s Stig Dagerman’s “German Autumn,†a book of reportage from Germany in the immediate aftermath of World War II that I’ve been carrying around since last summer. Yet this is the whole point of summer reading: its limitless promise, the possibility that we will, finally, get to everything, that, to steal a phrase from Rod Serling, there will be time enough at last.
And what if I do get to everything? (I won’t, but it’s a compelling fantasy.) Well, then, there’s always the iPad, loaded by now with a few hundred titles, from Chester Burnett to T.S. Eliot, Nelson Algren to Arthur Conan Doyle.
I don’t read new books on the iPad, although it has become a way to reconnect with the old. Still, at the same time, it is more than that: a wild card, an agent of serendipity (something else I associate with summer) and a standing guarantee that I will always have something to read.
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