Binding Love
What to do with all those books you can't let go of
Published in the Santa Cruz Sentinel January 30, 2015Freestanding, easy to
assemble, and highly transportable , ladder shelves can be made from a ladder of any height that works for your space (preferably an old wooden one) and some wood planks. |
In the movie “Wild,” Cheryl Strayed (played by Reese
Witherspoon) sets out alone to hike the Pacific Crest Trail (PCT)—one of the
country’s longest and toughest through-trails—with little outdoor experience
and a backpack so heavy she develops nasty, raw welts on her hips and
shoulders. A helpful guy she meets along the trail shows her how to lighten her
load by paring down the items she’s carrying to the absolutely essentials. When
they get to her books, he suggests carrying only the chapters she hasn’t yet
read, and burning the rest. He demonstrates by tearing out a big hunk of Faulkner’s
“As I Lay Dying.”
Which just about killed me.
Destroying, defacing, even just drawing in the margins
of a book—especially one you love—still strikes me as barbaric. (Don’t even get
me started on the disrespect of dog-earring pages.) Yeah, I eventually learned
to underline the heck out of a dry college textbook, but even then I did so
with a light pencil mark and a ruler. Books are precious, sacred and deserve
our respect.
But of course repurposing enthusiasts have other
ideas. They excise pages from books and fold, cut, crumple and print on them. They
carve the covers, contort the spines. They make jewelry, vases, wreaths,
bouquets, collages, garlands, even pumpkins out of books. I suppose they
gravitate towards book pages because the text will give their project a nice mottled-gray
surface pattern, or imply a sense of literary sophistication, or convey a
message, or just give new life to an object they might otherwise add to the
landfill.
If you want to explore making household objects both
decorative and utilitarian, artist/author Lisa Occhipinti’s 2011 book “The
Repurposed Library” is a good place to start. In 33 projects she demonstrates
how to deconstruct books to make lampshades, journals, mirrors, clocks,
birdhouses and more.
But Occhipinti’s more recent book takes a somewhat
different approach to books. “’Novel Living,’” she says, “is a hymnal to
actual, physical books, their forms and their functions.” She talks lovingly
about the physicality of books, as only an avid reader and collector would. She
describes how reading a book stirs our senses: we are aware of its scent and
tactile qualities as we cradle a book “as we would an infant child,” close to
our heart. She compares the intimate interaction we have with bound books—“the tender,
nearly silent turning of pages, like tucking a lock of hair behind the ear”—to the
much less visceral swipe of a screen.
Her writing takes me back to my junior high days when,
after school, I walked out of my way to the small branch library to check out
“Lad: A Dog” and every other noble collie tale by Albert Payson Terhune, who
was instantly my favorite author from my teacher Mrs. Faus’s classic reading
list.
Daphne du
Maurier’s “Rebecca.” Occhipinti inspires me to retrieve those beloved
books from the cold, damp garage to preserve and conserve them, and perhaps even
display them.
Our books, she says, represent our cultural and
personal histories. She wants our haphazard book collections to become
inviting, conveniently accessed libraries. “A library organizes books into a
snapshot of who you are,” she says. “To live with them reminds us of who we are
and where we came from.” When Occhipinti uses the word “library,” she’s not
suggesting a dark-paneled room, with a fireplace, over-stuffed chair, and a
ladder on wheels (although, that would be nice to have too). A library can be set-up
in just about any room of the house, and arranged on various configurations of
shelves, carts or cabinets. (One of her most clever and portable display ideas is
an old wooden ladder with spans of plywood for shelves.)
The Gallery Table
project—made from an IKEA Lack table—is based on museum furniture for exhibiting books and other ephemera like valuable antiquities. |
A collection of books don’t become a library, the
author says, until they are curated and organized. Bibliographic order—by subject,
author and/or title—will help keep books easy to find. But aesthetic
considerations such as color and size can be part of the equation too. “To
alleviate the needle-in-a-haystack-ness that is part of the color or size-based
system of arrangement, merge aesthetics with function by covering your books in
color-coded paper and writing their titles on the spines,” she suggests.
Occhipinti also wants us to design with books by
creating small tableaux she calls “bookscapes.” Books can be placed in idle
places such as a non-operating fireplace (kind of an unsettling association, if
you ask me), or stacked on a rarely used accent chair. A thematic seashore
tableau can be created with nautical books and seashells on top of a dresser.
To me, though, decorating with books downplays their
content and higher purpose. If a special book is to be displayed outside the library
context, it should be in the spotlighted like a prima ballerina. Occhipinti’s two
best project ideas exhibit books like works of art: her IKEA hack is a Gallery
Table that mimics a museum display case, using an IKEA Lack table, four wooden
spacers and tabletop glass; her Lighted Book Box, made from a wooden wine
crate, vintage wallpaper and a wireless puck light, would be perfect for my
dad’s “Peter Rabbit” series.
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On an excursion to San Francisco last fall, we came
across a small North Beach jewelry shop that must have had over 1,000 old
books. The whole place had that musty-tangy perfume of aged paper, ink and
adhesive. These hardcover rescues—some masked with construction paper—were arranged
in myriad ways to hold and display necklaces, earrings and bracelets. Yes, they
were using books in a “supporting” role, but, for me, the jewelry wasn’t really
there—it was all about the books. I wanted to sit on the floor, open each one
and see what was inside. I wanted to give each book a little moment of solemn recognition
before we both headed off down the trail.
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