[image by Brian]
Goal for June: Read a book a day. Follow my reading list here.
Sometimes books are not for reading but for looking at.
Green reading tip: Make books into pieces of visual art.
So this tip’s not particularly green, except that turning books into sculptures of sorts means a reusing of books — and reusing’s always eco…. Some ideas juxtaposed with some recent books I’ve read:
My Life had stood — a Loaded Gun -: Sculpted, cut-up, shaped, and lamp-ed books of art. (via 3quarksdaily)
Paul Valery’s Monsieur Teste is a book cut-up — a book composed of fragments, or maybe more accurately, a book as evidence of the fragmentary nature of experience.
In fact while Valery published a slim volume titled Monsieur Teste in 1896, Valery kept scribbling about this Teste figure in his notebooks, using him as a sort of philosophical alter-ego throughout his life: “The systematic use of Me as He.” Or, “I confess that I have made an idol of my mind, but I have found no other.”
The Princeton UP edition I read begins with the original publication, followed notes and fragments the translator collected together.
and I added, repeating what all rather simple-minded people think: “So, what am I doing here?”
“Well…,” said Monsieur Teste, “you are wondering what you are doing here….”
Book spine poetry: Books juxtaposed to reveal new strange meanings. (via 3qd; image from Nina Katchadourian)
Juxtaposing a girl’s coming-of-age story with biblical allusions and dreamlike new myths, Jeanette Winterson’s Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit tells the semi-autobiographical story of a gal raised by Pentecostal evangelists who slowly discovers her own beliefs and lesbian desires — and gets kicked out of her church and home pretty fast.
Odd thing is, in the end, Jeanette comes back to town to visit her religion-crazed mother. Oranges is in large part a story of family, forgiveness, and redemption — these terms defined very differently, of course, from Jeanette’s original upbringing.
Objectified artists’ books. Book as coffin-shaped love poems to a vampire. Book that pops up. Book as a book of matches. Book as perfume. Book as an illustration of rare flowers.
Eudora Welty’s The Ponder Heart is not an artists’ book — I just happened to’ve read it right before writing this post. The Ponder Heart tells the humorous story of Daniel Ponder, a Southern guy with a rather maniacal tendency to give everything he owns away — and also to marry on a whim. I rate this book mildly amusing.
Books read:
Paul Valery, Monsieur Teste
Jeanette Winterson, Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit
Eudora Welty, The Ponder Heart












Okay I know this is an old post but I just spent a very enjoyable 5 minutes on book spine poetry.
Not very graceful, but hearfelt
bon voyage, mr president,
when things fall apart, nobody!
yes
take it personally
Comment by Alistair Williamson — January 24, 2008 @ 7:25 pm