Thursday, July 16, 2020

Inscriptions Boon or Blot

Inscriptions Boon or Blot I love to shop for used books. One of my favorite finds in the last couple of years was copies of Ex Libris  and Rereadings  by Anne Fadiman, together in one store. Id been looking for both books for some time, always finding a lone copy of Ex Libris, but never Rereadings. I like things to match, so it became this absurd quest to find both books at the same used bookstore (I know now theres a third book in this beautiful little trio, but at the time I missed the memo). The day I found both books together was a day for celebration. I bought both, triumphantly, and then proceeded to not read them.  Last week, after writing about memoirs about books, I pulled my copy of  Ex Libris  off the shelf to finally, finally read. When I opened it I noticed, for the first time, the inscription written on the dedication page in purple ink: June, 2003 Education is the ability to listen to almost anything without losing your temper or your confidence. Robert Frost Kim Thanks for a great school year! M.H. What are the chances of finding a book with an inscription to a person with my own name? Id guess not high, but Im a reader, not a statistician. Coincidentally (or, perhaps not), Fadiman has an essay in Ex Libris  about inscriptions in books Words on a Flyleaf.  For Fadiman (and myself), inscriptions can be a blessing or a curse: Unlike the card that accompanies, say, a sweater, from which it is soon likely to part, a book and its inscription are permanently wedded. This can be either a boon or a blot. On the plus side, coming across an inscription either in a book I  received as a gift or one I plucked randomly off the shelf at a used bookstore always makes me smile. Particularly if they are, like the inscription I found in Ex Libris, heartfelt and slightly verbose. I always wonder who the writer and  receiver  were. It seems clear that Kim was a teacher or administrator, but who is M.H.? A fellow teacher? A student? A friend who spent the year listening to Kim complain or exclaim about her students? Its hard to know, but you have to admire M.H. for quoting Robert Frost. Yet despite how much I love finding inscriptions, I never write them in the books I give. Im a notorious book pusher at holidays, but writing an inscription seems  presumptuous. Its not my place to write on the pages of someone elses book before they get the chance to read it. Plus, what if its a book theyve already read? A book they dont want to read?  A book they want to pass on to someone else? How will they return or exchange or pass on that book if Ive already scribbled on the first page? More importantly, an inscription gives a book weight entirely outside how the reader will feel after reading it. A book suddenly has meaning above and beyond, I think youd really like this story. It has significance tied to a date or time or relationship that makes the book hard to part with whether you want to keep it or not. I dont want to put that sort of pressure into the gift of a book.  After all, how would M.H. feel if he/she knew Kim gave away the copy of Ex Libris  that he/she bought and signed? If that Kim were me, Id hate to find out.