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This year I am trying to read more deliberately whimsically.
Go ahead and giggle, I know it’s ridiculous.
Over the course of a reading lifetime, I’ve allowed some reading habits that I enjoyed to fall away, like reading with the seasons in mind.
Like resolving to read something because I saw that someone else reading it (and, wait for it, ACTUALLY reading it with them, not simply pulling it from the shelf with good intentions).
Do I even know what I mean by all this? Not really. So, if you’re confused, me too. But maybe you do know what I mean. Or maybe it’s not relatable, but perhaps you can relate to the idea of longing to return to a previous reading habit.
For now, I’m thinking of it as reading more responsively, and one way it’s playing out right now is with my rereading of Italo Calvino’s If on a Winter’s Night a Traveller. A book I first read in 2000 (the copy pictured alongside).
Between then and now, I’ve often said I wanted to reread it. I’ve pulled it from the shelf in other winters. When Kaggsy was rereading her Calvinos, that was another nudge—she loves this book. When Vishy read it, that was another—though, he doesn’t.
Now, at last, I am rereading it, and in the winter. This morning it was -22, every surface covered with snow, and the rock doves (pigeons) were queued for the heated bath, to warm up their toes and have a drink. They are travelling in the world and I am travelling on the page.
My favourite part of this Calvino novel is the first chapter, but that’s probably easy to find (just so you know, however, there is a whole other side to IOAWNAT, so if you pick up a copy, it’s not all like this)–so I’ll share another bookish passage instead:
“Who you are, Reader, your age, your status, profession, income: that would be indiscreet to ask. It’s your business, you’re on your own. What counts is the state of your spirit now, in the privacy of your home, as you try to re-establish perfect calm in order to sink again into the book; you stretch out your legs, you draw them back, you stretch them again. But something has changed since yesterday. Your reading is no longer solitary: you think of the Other Reader, who, at the same moment, is also opening the book; and there, the novel to be read is superimposed by a possible novel to be lived, the continuation of your story with her, or better still, the beginning of a possible story. This is how you have changed since yesterday, you who insisted you preferred a book, something solid, which lies before you, easily defined, enjoyed without risks, to a real-life experience, always elusive, discontinuous, debated. Does this mean that the book has become an instrument, a channel of communication, a rendezvous? This does not mean its reading will grip you less: on the contrary, something has been added to its powers.”
Now, Other Reader, what say you? How are your stories continuing?
I like the idea of actually doing something you’ve been saying you’re going to do. Which is the impetus behind me trying to finish (or get current with) some series I’ve left hanging for years. So bravo for deliberate whimsy and rereading the book that you’ve been saying you want to reread! I’ve got a few of those!
And it’s been such a good read, even better than the first time. Catching up with unfinished series is a great way to keep your commitment muscle(s) in shape. Plus you repotted those three plants! I kept forgetting to comment on that, but I think about it when I’m on the mat and staring around at the plants. hee hee
I’m excited for your whimsical reading goal, mainly because I can reap all the benefits by following along through this blog, and seeing these really cool quotes that you’ve plucked out. It’s -25 here right now, we’ve been in a deep freeze for awhile now, so I can relate to these rock pigeons. Perfect reading weather really!
You usually seem to be 3 or 4 degrees lower than we are, which is nothing when you’re already wearing eleventy-billion layers. But today the sun is shining, which is a rare treat, and which makes it seem much warmer than it is. Today the chickadees are going wild; if they were readers, they’d be reading flash fiction.
I love how you’re planning to be spontaneous 😉 But I get it. I’d like to be that way more often. I especially hope to make my 20 Books of Summer more whimsy-driven, because every year it ends up feeling too much of a chore by the end. I pulled from my shelves a very tall pile of books I want to read “just because,” not for any particular challenge or deadline, and leant them up against my bedside table. The idea is to take one from it every month or so. We’ll see how it goes!
Your lucky local doves, getting their own hot tub! I can’t even imagine your -22 given how bitterly cold our 3 (+ wind + rain) feels here.
whimsical reading is the best, I should try Calvino again as well. . .
So far my efforts towards more whimsical choices have resulted in a very messy stack (even for me, a moody reader with a well-populated stack to start with), so, we’ll see… heheh
I must try Calvino again. I tried this one about thirty yrs ago and didn’t ‘get’ it at all, yet there is so much love for it!
I cannot imagine -22 at all – that level of cold boggles my mind. Good weather for a nice port or muscat though 🙂
Sometimes just hearing other people love hard on a book sets you up for disappointment. And especially when the bookish parts of this one are sooooo inviting but, then, the other parts of the narrative (about how we imagine and how we engage with stories) could seem pretty random/disconnected if you’re not expecting things to veer off in that direction.
It is a little mind-boggling. The other day I was sure I would be fine without my toque (knitted hat). But that was foolish. However, I passed a young father wearing just a hoodie while packing his kids into a pick-up truck, which seemed a whole ‘other state of insanity.
Wow, -22! I’ve never experienced that. Sounds like a perfect time to read If on a Winter’s Night a Traveller. I loved this book too—actually I went on a bit of a Calvino binge on my blog a while back (*checks blog, realises it was… 16 years ago*). Anyway, I like how he talks directly to you, the reader, and keeps feeding you different fragments and versions. I should go back to this one too.
We’re only out in that because we’re clearing off the snow to water and feed the birds and critters in the mornings, otherwise we could wait for it to rise about ten degrees. But it’s just a matter of adding more layers.
Oh, I know that feeling. Heh I was shocked to see when I’d last read it as well. Parts of it feel so intimate, the way he speaks to you and only you. (Nevermind anyone can read the book and feel that.) And it’s intensified because he gets the bookish parts so right–he really gets it. The other evening, I picked it up planning to read another two sections but, instead, I reread parts that I’d already read, feeling like I was noticing different details. I’d like to know more about how he wrote it.
There was a story about Ontario in one newsletter or another this morning, (the subject was nuclear power, which our mini-Trump currently in opposition wishes to emulate) which used the phrase “under ice for half the year”. How do you live! In Kalgoorlie, where I was working yesterday, the temp was about 60 deg C higher than your -22.
I don’t wish to read ‘whimsically’, but I do wish I could read with that complete abandonment I once had which made it almost impossible to drag me out of the book in my hands.
Oh, yes, “we” are quite the poster-child of that industry, aren’t we. No Three-Mile-Island to muss up the scenario yet. Easy to imagine all the grand publicity “our” genocidal residential school system received more than a century ago, isn’t it.
That’s something I have tried to recapture as well. But now there are so many different leisure activities, many of which require less effort…perhaps it’s unreasonable to expect we can return to (mimic? cultivate? incite?) that state in the present-day from a cultural perspective, regardless of age and responsibilities?
Reading your post made me also want to think about rereading If On A Winter’s Night, why it’s been — quickly thumbing through things… 😉 — 2017 that I last read it. It must be time!
I tend to read anti-seasonally, especially in winter, though. Love and Death in a Hot Country? Summertime? Summerland? Maybe some Miranda July?
Hahaha With August Wilson I suppose? heh That’s still reading in response to the season, I would say. Only that you’re seeking heat in response to what’s outside your window. I’ve done that on occasion too, but more often the opposite way (maybe because I am more likely to seek relief from the heat than the other way ’round).
Reading “deliberately whimsically” is a bit of an oxymoron, eh? I completely understand your meaning but your description made me laugh 🙂
I read If on a winter’s night ages and ages ago. I think it may have been a library copy. I will have to check my shelves, because it’s one of those books I might need to own so I can reread it and mark it all up 🙂
Who says that we have to make sense all the time!? heheh
It’s definitely good company, and I can imagine rereading it in all seasons actually.
I *love* that book. And now you’ve made me want to read it again!!!
And you have reread it not-too-long-ago, so that’s a real mark in favour of this one!
Lovely post and wonderful quote! Reading whimsically sounds the way to go 🙂
In concert, I’m planning assiduously with other reading; so far, the combo is making for a very messy stack, but a very happy reader.