Skip to main content

The Book Tree and other Leaving Stories


We had just been let off by the taxi at the corner of the block in the Prezelauer district of Berlin where my friend Elfriede lives. Dragging our 20-kilo loads along, my daughter and I trudge along the street toward her house. I have my eyes on the sidewalk and almost bump into a tree trunk—and look up to find it’s not. In the roughly carved recesses of what was once a tree, are bookshelves, the books inside protected by curved glass that could be opened with a push. No locks and no latches. The books look well thumbed and put there by caring hands, not just discarded after a quick read. Later, Elfriede explains it to us. People in the neighbourhood drop off books they have read and would like to share.  Others pick them up, or just leaf through them while sitting at the café next door, sometimes leaving another book in exchange. 

Charming idea.

A lovely woman I meet at dinner later in the week tells me that if she finishes a book while she’s on the Underground (she lives in London), she leaves it on the train for someone to pick up and read. If she still has some way to go before her stop, she moves to another spot and watches to see if someone will pick it up. “It feels good to share something you’ve read with someone else, even a complete stranger,” she says. Sometimes, of course, a person will look at the book and put it back down. "It's interesting to see what kind of person will actually take it to read," she adds.

And another friend talks about books left behind at the women’s hostel she visits, books residents are done reading and have no wish to pack into their transcontinental luggage. She’s often found great reads among these discarded collections, and has replenished the lot with her own once-read books. So the shelves in the hostel are a constant surprise—the books do a merry go round, and each time she passes the shelf she finds something new and interesting.

I, on the other hand, find it awfully difficult to part with books. I hoard them. The stories they hold within their covers are themselves embedded within stories of my life and relationships. Gifts from friends. Memories of moods and conversations. Contexts of giving and taking. The jackets often hold dedications that I would hate to discard.

And so my bookshelves groan under the weight of my acquisitions, usually gaining more pounds than they lose (I do keep losing books to defaulting borrowers from time to time). I love sharing my books with other avid readers, but I do want my books back. I find comfort in my very own hardback version of One Hundred Years of Solitude, or my disintegrating copy of The Far Pavillions that my father bought for me on my 16th birthday from India Book House on Kingsway (a shop that no longer exists, on a street that is known by another name now).

I must say, though, that the thought of passing on good books has its appeal. To know that a story that one has enjoyed is being experienced by someone else, can be comforting. While I would certainly not be able to part with every single book on my shelves, there are some I would be happy to leave in the Book Tree, and maybe even on the subway…and it actually might be a thrill to know that someone has picked it up, smiled at lines that you’ve enjoyed, and cried at parts that have choked you up, and lived through the story in their own ways.

Comments

CP said…
Beautiful...

Popular posts from this blog

A house called Ayodhya

How do words get taken away from you? How do they mutate and reconfigure around entirely new meanings, only weakly related to those that they held when you owned them? And then, through repetition and constant association, they solidify into these new forms, their other histories hidden behind impenetrable layers, where they have not been erased altogether.   I live in a house whose name often elicits a curious look, raised eyebrow, a muffled cough, a judging eye, or even a vigorous nod of approval. But for even the least politically minded, the name is evocative of something. For some of us, it is the wave of negativity, divisiveness, and violence unleashed by the events of a December three decades ago. For others, it may represent the righteous assertion of identity.   But the name etched into the gate pillar, now fading and diminished when compared to the glitzy lettering on neighbouring walls, has nothing to do with the politics of place and claimed heritage. It is a simpl...

Remembering Ja

Ja (right) with Maxine, at the Alternative Network meeting, 2004 I opened the newspaper this morning and way down at the bottom of page five was a small insert in remembrance of an old friend and sometime mentor, Janaki Iyer, known simply as "Ja" to many of us.  I myself took a decade or more to make the transition from "Mrs Iyer" to "Janaki" to a very hesitant "Ja"--the diminutive seemed not to do justice to a woman who in a very gentle and quiet way had touched so many people, young, old, and like myself, somewhere in between. First, the specifics. Janaki was a teacher from start to finish. After many years of teaching in an upscale Bombay school, she moved to Hyderabad and, with an enthusiastic friend, started Ananda Bharati, a learning space for children of migrant labourers, in a small room in the YMCA, Tarnaka. Many of those children went on to join the mainstream school system and complete their secondary education; a few even obtai...

Talking about Talk: a conversation with Sherry Turkle

Credit: CNN Image s The Tang Building sits on the southern edge of the MIT campus, overlooking the river whose grey this autumn afternoon acts as a foil to the gold and auburn of the trees across its wide span. I rush up the stairs to the second floor—I am a minute past the appointed hour—and arrive, just a little out of breath, on the second floor. The corridor is dark and the roomy lobby leading to the room that bears the number I’ve been given is even darker. I check my phone again to make sure I have it right and then venture inside, flipping the light switch and finding a spot on a comfortable sofa. One never feels quite prepared for an interview. Especially when it involves someone who has already been in the media eye over the years, whose engaging commentaries on life in the digital age have found their way to the TED stage and from there into millions of YouTube and Facebook shares, whose books straddle the academic and popular; someone who could be the Nora Ephron ...