Nicholas
Reid reflects in essay form on general matters and ideas related to
literature, history, popular culture and the arts, or just life in general. You are free to agree
or disagree with him.
MORE ANXIETY
ABOUT PRINTED BOOKS
A
few weeks back, my wife and I did something that we had not done for nearly 16
years, when I was still a film reviewer and we sometimes spent whole days
watching movies at the International Film Festival. We went to the local art
house and watched three movies one after the other. In part, this was our
knee-jerk reaction now that lock-down is (apparently) over and cinemas are open
once again.
One was the documentary Water Lilies of Monet – The Magic of Water and Light. We enjoyed
it, but found parts of it (ironically) a little too “arty”, especially when it
went into re-enactments, with voice-over, of Monet’s life. There’s that odd
phenomenon, too, that such documentaries, with their shots of real locations
that inspired works of art, often have the perverse effect of belittling the
art itself. Let me not be churlish, however. It was a delight to see so many
images of Monet’s work about the Seine, even before he began specialising in
water lilies; and I admit to being enlightened by the film’s account of Monet’s
close friendship with the politician Clemenceau, a relationship of which I had
been quite ignorant. Another non-French film with a French theme was Resistance, purporting to dramatise the
life of Marcel Marceau during the Second World War. Regrettably it was rubbish.
Marceau, destined to become the world’s most famous mime artist, was a genuine hero
and humanitarian who did work in the French Resistance and did save the lives
of many Jewish children who were in danger of deportation to death camps.
Certainly his life deserves celebrating. But the film was hyped up with
Hollywood tropes and sensationalism, melodramatic scenes that never happened
(such as Marceau’s confrontation with Klaus Barbie) and ridiculous dialogue. A
story that could have made a good documentary was instead turned into formulaic
nonsense.
But
the third movie was the real subject of this editorial, which I have delayed
mentioning because of my discursive (read – waffling) ways.
D.W.
Young’s documentary The Booksellers
consists largely of interviews with mainly American and mainly New York (but also
a few British) second-hand booksellers – or as they prefer to be known,
antiquarian booksellers. In part, it was about the eccentricity of these
(overwhelmingly elderly) people, many of whom drifted into the trade either
because they inherited it or simply because they loved the sight and the feel
and the smell of old books. One or two -
included a man who must be a multi-millionaire – inherited huge libraries of
valuable first editions and there was much talk about their monentary value. Information
was given about the hundreds of thousands – and in some cases millions – of
dollars that have been paid at auctions for Shakespeare folios, early editions
of Don Quixote, and signed copies of
other classics. There were also the dealers with niche markets in books on
geography or cartography or science fiction or Beat poets or what have you.
An
interesting point made by one interviewee (there were no subtitles to identify
any of them) was that, no matter how monetarily valuable many books are, they
never earn the tens-of-millions of dollars that are paid for some paintings. An
artwork is a unique thing, while even a valuable book (unless it is a codex or
manuscript) has been replicated in the print-run that produced it.
Yet,
apart from the enthusiasm of one or two youngsters in the trade, there was an
undertone of anxiety to this film. Many of New York’s well-established and once
well-patronised second-hand booksellers have closed down and the whole trade
model is shrinking. Some of the interviewees say that what once sustained their
business were the browsers who simply came to look and might perhaps discover
something that interested them. There also used to be the joy of the hunt. Some
buyers would be in search of a rare book that had eluded them for years; and
the joy of finding that rare book was what motivated them. Now all manner of
rare books are sold on the internet. Hello Amazon. Those who seek a particular
rare book can now find it at the press of a key. The joy of the hunt has gone and
antiquarian bookshops are dying.
I
know at first hand the allure of second-hand-bookshops here in New Zealand,
because it was once my regular weekend pastime to trawl through them. I have
never been in search of rare or valuable books – partly because I have never
had the money to buy such items, but mainly because I was always in search of
things I actually wanted to read, regardless of the tattered or cheap-edition
form in which I bought them. For me, it is the contents of books that are
paramount, not the presentation, much as I like viewing and handling old books
with their firm board covers and marbled end-papers and deckled edges and
superseded typefaces.
I
was well-acquainted with the type of mileu that was made into such good comedy
in the British sitcom Black Books
20-odd years ago. Many of the proprietors really were people who seemed more interested
in reading at their desk than in selling books, and who could be grumpy with
buying customers for disturbing their peace. But many of the shops I used to
visit have disappeared. There used to be five second-hand bookshops in central
Auckland. There are now only two, and one of them is exclusively for those
seeking very expensive editions (so not for me). The massive Hard-to-Find-But-Worth-the-Effort
bookshop that used to be in Onehunga has now down-sized and moved to the
inner-city suburb of Newton. There used to be three second-hand bookshops in
Devonport. There is now one, and it is half the size it used to be. Selling second-hand
books was always a precarious way of making a living, but I can only assume
that New Zealand second-hand booksellers are now facing the same pressures as
American ones.
Yet,
despite some predictions, the enemy is not Kindle or other forms of reading
whole books on line. In the last twenty years it has been proven repeatedly
that people still prefer to read physically-existing printed books instead of
books on a screen.
As
I argued in an earlier posting, AnxietyAbout Books, there is now a widespread anxiety about the whole traditional
concept of reading. Rather than reading whole books (in any form), more
functionally-literate people prefer to read bite-sized information, which is
indeed seen online. The slow demise of second-hand bookshops is only a small
part of a wider cultural shift in which television, podcasts, websites and blogs
like the one you are now reading have moved to the centre of culture, while
those of us who know how to read at length become a smaller proportion of society.
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