As the only writerly thing I’ve done this month is record an
interview for the fantastic Listening Books (do check them out), I’ll have to
relapse in this blog to my favourite subject: reading.
More specifically, Books I Have Loved and Re-Read 9,000
times…
What is it that makes it such a joy to read a favourite book
over and over again? I’ve got the sort of temperament that gets frustrated by
going over something I already know, when there’s always something new to see
or do. But re-reading is something I absolutely love. This week I’ve picked up
M.M. Kaye’s Shadow of the Moon for what must be at least the twentieth time,
and I can’t put it down. Why?
For anyone who doesn’t know the book, it’s a pretty
conventionally structured ‘historical romance’ set at the time of the Indian Mutiny.
Things in its favour: to me, the prose is stunning, though some people might
find it a big long-winded in comparison to modern books. It’s a big book, so
there are always a few new details to notice. There’s plenty of scheming and
intrigue, besides the romance, and plenty of different points of view put
forward by an author who was very familiar with the cultures she was writing
about. It’s a fun, exciting book.
But… twenty times? That’s pretty excessive, even for my
reading habits. I think the desire to re-read goes further than just having
found a good book and wanting to experience again the initial thrill of
discovering it. There’s an obvious point that re-reading is in some ways more
comforting and less challenging than reading a new book – you know what you’re
going to get, after all. Kids want the same stories again and again, and that’s
possibly partly the reason. But each time I read Room on the Broom to my
daughter, she still manages to notice new things in the pictures. It’s clearly
in some ways the same and in some ways different every time.
Maybe it’s because the stories we love become more ‘ours’
every time we read them. Perhaps the ones we fixate on are the ones we wish we’d
written, that feel so close to us we think they could almost have come out of
ourselves (not necessarily that we’d have had the skill to write them, just
that they’re close to our inner creative selves).
Also, some of the precious pony books I had as a child have
fallen apart, so many times were they read – I think that was as a result of a
strong desire to be inside the words, to know them so intimately that I could
imagine myself actually stepping into those worlds, one day in the future, and
journeying through their places, befriending their characters, riding their
horses…
It’s a tendency I haven’t lost as an adult, although the
desires are different. Sometimes I want, desperately, to understand the real
world better – I look to books such as The Grapes of Wrath to explain how straitened
people can get, and how cruel people can intentionally be, and no matter how
many times I tear apart its pages, I can’t get to the logic of it all.
Sometimes it’s just fantasy – Jilly Cooper, Mary Stewart, Dick Francis – they all
illuminate specific worlds I crave to wander through.
I don’t know quite what I get from M.M. Kaye, apart,
perhaps, from her sharp-eyed descriptions of the different views of British
people about the occupation of India, but maybe that’s enough – the attitudes
of oppressors towards those they oppress and vice versa is a subject large
enough to never become tedious, and the question of why it happens can never
fully be answered. And each time I read the same views, I see them differently
according to what’s going on around me at that moment.
I guess I haven’t got any particularly definite conclusions
about exactly why I’m galloping through 600 pages of tiny typescript I already
know well, when time is so precious. But perhaps that does lead me to another answer
– on a horse, the best gallops are often those on paths where you both already
know the length and the terrain. You know there aren’t rabbit holes to watch
out for, or gates to stumble over, and you know how long you’ve got to enjoy
the speed, so you can just concentrate on what it actually feels like to be in
the moment, galloping on a willing horse, with the wind in your face and the
drumming of hoofbeats below.
2 comments:
Oh, I love this post! I am SUCH a re-reader, and really identify with this. Some books are just like old friends and we have to check in with them once in a while. Even though we know what they will tell us. Some books and characters just become part of who we are.
They really do become part of who we are! (Which I sort of worry about with Jilly Cooper... but hey, she's got a sense of humour...)
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