Reading Day
I remember these from college. They were Cramming Days, more like it, days before exams when normal class schedules were paused so that intense studying could begin. The nomenclature perplexed me: It's the day before the exam and you're just now reading?
This is not the kind of reading day I'm envisioning for today. Instead, I'm dreaming of a healthy sick day, a day spent entirely in bed if that's what suits me. Or maybe on the couch or the beanbag chair or even while striding (gliding?) on the elliptical. The point is not the posture. The point is that I will spend the day reading.
In childhood I would think nothing of this. I could lie on my canopy bed with a book of fairytales, or in my aunt and uncle's attic with a Mary Stewart novel, and be lost for hours.
This is what I want for today. A no-guilt reading day. A day when I don't squeeze reading into Metro or bus rides or the last few minutes before sleep.
There are seasons in a reading life, and I have just pulled out of a fallow period into a gloriously abundant one. There are not one but two Patricia Hampl books, a memoir by Thomas Lynch, essays by Wendell Berry, Storm Lake by Art Cullen, subtitled A Chronicle of Change, Resilience, and Hope from a Heartland Newspaper and, speaking of heartland, a book by that name subtitled A Memoir of Working Hard and Being Broke in the Richest Country on Earth.
Most of these are library books, which gives my reading day some urgency. As does the pile on my bedside table, which has become precarious enough that drastic remedies are called for. All of which is to say that a Reading Day will be good for my health — in more ways than one.
This is not the kind of reading day I'm envisioning for today. Instead, I'm dreaming of a healthy sick day, a day spent entirely in bed if that's what suits me. Or maybe on the couch or the beanbag chair or even while striding (gliding?) on the elliptical. The point is not the posture. The point is that I will spend the day reading.
In childhood I would think nothing of this. I could lie on my canopy bed with a book of fairytales, or in my aunt and uncle's attic with a Mary Stewart novel, and be lost for hours.
This is what I want for today. A no-guilt reading day. A day when I don't squeeze reading into Metro or bus rides or the last few minutes before sleep.
There are seasons in a reading life, and I have just pulled out of a fallow period into a gloriously abundant one. There are not one but two Patricia Hampl books, a memoir by Thomas Lynch, essays by Wendell Berry, Storm Lake by Art Cullen, subtitled A Chronicle of Change, Resilience, and Hope from a Heartland Newspaper and, speaking of heartland, a book by that name subtitled A Memoir of Working Hard and Being Broke in the Richest Country on Earth.
Most of these are library books, which gives my reading day some urgency. As does the pile on my bedside table, which has become precarious enough that drastic remedies are called for. All of which is to say that a Reading Day will be good for my health — in more ways than one.
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