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January 03, 2008

Hardcovers, Why Can't I Love You?

Imagine the scene: it's the 2007 National Book Awards. In the banquet hall, each table features a centerpiece made up of copies of the nominated titles. Invited guests polish off their desserts while, up in the balcony, the press and a small pack of bloggers put some polish on their writing. Fran Lebowitz speaks the last words of her closing remarks and the awards ceremony officially ends. Lured by the scent of freebies, crazed bloggers stampede down the stairs and run through the banquet hall grabbing books as authors and industry-types topple in their wake.

Well, it wasn't exactly like that. But I'm sure I moved at a quicker clip than usual. And I did stick my finger into an untouched dessert tray just for a little taste. Whatever happened, my copy of Joshua Ferris' Then We Came to the End started out as an NBA centerpiece.

It's a hardcover and it has been pissing me off. Not the story, which is entertaining enough, but the actual, physical object.

First off, I took off the dust jacket. Such action is sort of counterproductive since the jacket exists as protection, but I find it a nuisance. Jackets tend to creep skyward on me, making books too tall and gangly. Up to now, Then We Came to the End has been at home, at work, in the car, and on several lunches. The poor thing is becoming positively filthy, and it bothers me more to wreck a hardcover than a paperback.

When at lunch, the damn thing is simply too heavy and inflexible to hold open with one hand while eating with the other. I am forced to read with it lying on the table, so it also has been doubling as a placemat.

Then yesterday as I rode the elevator, I dropped the book on my foot. One of its corners got smashed in the fall and I have a little round bruise on the top of my foot. I'm glad I didn't break a toe, but none of this is helping me love the thing.



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comments

You should be glad you didn't hurt a vein! I love hardcovers, but I usually read them in bed or I carry them separately from everything else so that they don't get wrecked. (Although they make good folders to put loose paper in!) Unfortunately, I've been very broke lately and can't afford to buy hardbacks.

So...different topic here, but anyone caught any of the books-to-film of this past month? Like...Atonement or No Country for Old Men...?

I'm not a fan of the hardcover either, and for most of the same reasons you listed (I usually throw away the dust cover). Unlike most avid readers, I have no interest in building up a large personal library so while I appreciate the asthetics of a hardcover, it's not enough to convince me to shell out all that extra dough.

I actually LOVE to collect hardcover books. Paperbacks are so disposable and I see reading classic literature as something I want to pass down to my children. Hands dow the best Hardcover I have bought recently was

Admit One: A Journey into Film by Emmett James

I laughed out loud reading his exploits. It's the kind of book I want to share and keep and therefore hardcover is the only way to go.

Keep up the great blog!

J. Tran

You know, I happened to come across this post and have to say that hardcover books can be dangerous! I freelance write received a copy of the Chicago Manual of Style from my brother for Christmas. Anyway, I was pulling a review book off my shelf one day and it happened to cause a chain reaction and the Chicago Manual fell and landed on my foot. Cracked one of the bones in the process.

So I've learned to keep heavier books on a lower shelf far away from the books I read regularly.

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