The bookshelves in the loft have been too long overlooked and had acquired the sort of dust layer usually seen in attics in horror movies. Continuing my on-going project of getting realistic about why I am keeping books I've forgotten I even had, I've spent several days cleaning and sorting books.
About eight boxes went to the library on Saturday for a future book sale and at least eight more have been loaded up to be taken off today. There are also elderly (falling apart) paperbacks to go into paper recycling and elderly and long outdated text books to go to the dump, alas.
There are so many memories on those shelves. Here, in no particular order, are a few:
A song book from my summer Spanish class in 1959 -- a special six week course at Universidad Tecnologico y de Estudios Superiores in Monterrey, Mexico. I still remember the words to the songs and Las Clases de Cha Cha Cha was a favorite, along with Besame Mucho and Caminante.
My Old Kentucky Home: A Handbook for Southerners contained a grocery list in my grandmother's handwriting -- and a nasty memory: it was a fervent defense of segregation.
Europa Touring(1969) was the guide to our great motorcycle adventure and contained a packing list and a diagram of how everything (tent, clothes, cooking stuff, etc.) would fit into our duffel bag.
'57 /'58-- my ninth grade Latin textbook. I went on in high school to take four years of Latin along with three of Spanish -- anything to avoid physics and chemistry and higher math. Arma virumque cano, you all.
And in a folder full of pictures and pages torn from magazines (the low tech Pinterest of the time) along with much that reminds me how our tastes and interests change over time, I found a picture that was possibly the inspiration for our little Japanese style house that John built on a lake in Florida sometime in the Sixties.
I still like the look of it.
It's emotional whiplash, darting from one phase of my life to another. Part of the reason this job is taking so long.
8 comments:
I like the term emotional whiplash to describe your efforts. But kuddos to you for doing this! My books got pared way down on the last move...many donations!
Congrats on learning to drink from a cup.
I keep few books. Many are from the library and many others go to a good home of even a bad one.
Vicki, it was very interesting to see these samples from your re-discovered books. Definitely some time warp materials there. Do you think your children might want to hold sone to some of those treasures. The note about you and the cup, for example?
I also took four years of Latin, accompanied by two of French...and lots of higher math in high school. Science classes were not so kind to me.
xo
Wonderful reminiscences...thank you for sharing. Loved the note about "dear little Vicki" learning to drink from a cup; wicked cute.
OK, you definitely win...your 9th grade Latin text? Really? :)
I've been trying to downsize the endless shelves of books throughout the house and, yes, in the basement. I've been getting rid of quite a few, but one trip to the bookstore, and my addiction starts all over again. I loved some of the memories attached to your findings.
NCMtnwoman -- I still have my MOTHER's Latin text. And school books that belonged to my grandmother and her brother. And to John's grandmother.
Frances -- I'm saving a good bit of stuff, including the letter. The kids will have to deal with it but I doubt any of them will want the stuff.
Two shelves to go -- there seem to be a pi;e of old magazines, including a VOGUE from the early 80's. I was never a Vogue type but I was into collage -- perhaps that's why it's there.
Latin and Spanish did not find their way into my studies. History, philosophy did. Love to hear more about the motorcycle trip in Europe. I went from a bottle to a cup and then back to a bottle (beer)
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