Showing posts with label reality. Show all posts
Showing posts with label reality. Show all posts

08 January, 2014

Value as Treasure In Itself

Being employed at a retailer of books, any given customer enters our store from out of the winter's cold with a title scribbled on a piece of paper or pulled up on their smartphone. I am shown these titles or provided clues for their discovery, often out of reach of the customer's own memory. The numerous tables in the store that we must navigate through as we head off are full of newer books with covers designed so successfully that one may judge and be in the right to have judged its content by the affixed label. Tote bags and novelties are grabbed on the way to or back from the title we find, and brought to the registers. I have little doubt that sidelined merchandise sales are just at or greater than what we sell in paper.

A little more than half the time, their book lies on one of these tables of - a "best of","recently arrived" or "featured in." We have a table for nearly every section in the bookstore. And yet, there is a corner with little of this effulgence, a number of shelves left to leather-bound tomes with gilted edges and dusty mass market paperbacks, Library of America hardbacks and the unassuming Modern Library & Everyman's Library editions. It is a corner I look toward when my eyes have been all abuzz and ablaze with the maddening colors, graphics and blurb-ridden outsides of the books that may, or may not, make the cut this season for gift-able "readers." I print out a gift receipt if there is any hesitancy that they (or the gifted) will not.

I would direct every customer to that "Classics Corner" if each one were so inclined to choose something overlooked in their elementary, high school, or college days. Perhaps even discarding their bias over Silas Marner or their old, sick feeling looking at the size of Moby Dick - they'd discover the lasting joy and critical interest of a previous century of reading. If I am asked what I'd recommend, it's usually something that has been out for a decade or several decades - that's my own bias. Whether a bookstore employee has personally reviewed the book themselves at times holds little empirical importance over whether or not it is placed in hand and kept there, warm, until the checkout line. Rather, it needs to be available now, so being desired by a loved one; or it's a prize winner, perhaps being just been heard about "on the wind," i.e. The New York Times. What shines of a newer veneer sells better than what age has deemed of a stronger, lasting quality. 

So why not repackage and redesign? In fact, the NYRB is doing a good job of bringing us back to the sense of a book as having some value in itself, or a value that outlasts its current praise or past praise with a minimum of dressing. Even their editions could reign in design choices, keeping closer to solid colors, a welfare of detail, and few to no words of recommend. This bookseller-by-day handles hundreds of transactions and harbors just as many experiences of customer service to prove a hypothesis like the above to the most seasoned distributor, editor, or author. You learn to recognize the difference in selling a book and having sold someone a product.

In prefacing the discussion of my third book in hand, Jane Langton's The Diamond in the Window, with this experience of holiday book selling (with more than a little undertone of frustration) I wanted to highlight the difference between books as objects to be read or admired and books that provide reading experiences. The reading experience is central to Langton's novel for the young-in-spirit, and half-way through this novel there is enough indication that the immediate desire to have an item of worth is not half as valuable as the experience of searching for value in itself.

Set in Concord, Massachusetts, a hundred or so years after Thoreau, Emerson and Alcott's days, two young persons of Walden Street begin an adventure. Eleanor and Edward live with their Uncle Freddy and Aunt Lily. The former is an eccentric home dweller who speaks to his busts of the ancients Henry and Waldo, while the latter is a spinster who cannot make enough in piano lessons for her family to pay back taxes on their house. The children find this out without their guardians knowing so, and a small fear that their unsightly home will be torn down is born in their minds and hearts. Soon after, as they play across from their dank home, they notice that their attic must support an even higher room, when they spy a window they've never looked through. They discover the former room of their Aunt Lily's brother and sister Ned & Nora (psycho-spiritual doubles), who vanished along with a childhood friend from the East, Prince Krishna. Already, we find references to the 19th century Transcendentalists and their literary/religious sources.

As the search for treasure consumes their thoughts and guides their hands to turn over everything in the attic room, they decide to sleep there in the light of the diamond-shaped window. The window, which holds a poem whose stanzas are clues, gathers a different light each evening. Their dreams take on a different form, each night existing within and without the former belongings of their forgotten aunt, uncle, and family friend. Langton does an amazing job of creating a universe of connection over space and time that links the adventures of the dreaming children with the disappearance of the 3 persons dear to the Hall family. It is this compass of proportions as a guide and the dichotomy of dream/waking, past/present, west/east, that creates an inviting tension that the reader can't help but see through to resolve - especially with the impending date of their eviction from their own home.


The most interesting character in the novel is Uncle Freddy, the eccentric who is later re-instated as Professor Frederick T. Hall - after nearly being sent to the madhouse. He transitions from quotation to realization, from an obliviousness to the reality of their town to playing a key role in the celebration of Concord's historic past in the Revolutionary War. The thin line between what is sane and insane is tipped in the affirming direction, not because that's how he is able to fit into the society that would deny him, but because his mind is in-firmed by the teachings of men that would be his freedom. Even the Transcendentalists are transcended. Penultimately, a school is founded and a book to be written collaborated on between Professor Hall and Prince Krishna is begun (title unknown: perhaps something on the Bhagavad Gita's concept of liberation and its place in American thought after Thoreau?). Knowledge is pursued, not money, and what was lost, retrieved.


This book was cherished by both myself and to whom I read it aloud. Her mother loaned us the book and now that it is finished, I have an obligation to return it. But as we finished it and knew we had to send it back through the mail, I had this horrible feeling of anger at not having been gifted the book. It was acute and sharp, directed at her mother, and I thought about how I couldn't keep the object. Not until I could step back and observe my feelings did it occur how little I was able to take into my consciousness the teachings of The Diamond in the Window, every innocent, wise and loving word. Thinking myself no better experiencing this than anyone feeling an inclination towards one text or another at the bookstore, whatever the condition, I felt a deeper remorse-of-conscience for our kind in general. I caught my selfish attitude only upon self-reflection, though this brought me to the central teaching of Langton's book, which occurs in the chapter titled "The Chambered Nautilus." Seek out this book from your library, your local bookstore or a loved one, to find this jewel of Truth.

22 October, 2009

Currency of My Youth

Enlarge for details
Photoshop creation from scanned images


The single most influential video game upon my life has been a role-playing, Super Nintendo console release from the mid-1990s. Chrono Trigger's gameplay, throughout its epic themes, plot-developments and magnificent musical score, impressed upon my Being a certain conviction that the past, present and future are intermingling and reflecting upon one another. Many aspects of the game, such as the use of magic as based upon the elements, a planetary foe which is simultaneously aiding & abetting the evolution of consciousness, and the most aesthetically pleasing time machine since the DeLorean of Back to the Future, presented data to me that further crystallized my interests in art, biology, mythology, and all studies which have invariably aided my path toward understanding our planetary experience.

While I matured, video games had a publicly polarized opinion as destructive to young minds, helping along the institution of violence and isolation within society. As the accessibility of video games expanded just before my birth in 1985 from the arcade format to home consoles (worth corroborating to the emergence of the personal computer), the creativity of video gameplay design likewise increased with new varieties and directions. As all growth accompanies a rate of degradation - this is in reference to those games which displayed a lack of creativity or less virtuous themes (Mortal Kombat comes to mind, being very controversial for the gruesome "fatality" finishing moves) - the apprehension to approve of video games socially was often fueled by narrowing discussion of those which displayed violent acts toward human forms.

The 21st century affords us a variety of console, home computer, and handheld formats for video games with increasingly complex resolution, adaptability and gamer control. Although, at such high rates of technological advance, the very fabric of our interactions with video games are evermore challenged and stretched. Do we actually acquire a comprehension of the Reality which video games contain in their genesis, by our Senses or from the composite Mind of storytellers, composers, designers? - only the conscious laborer knows. The creations which continue to reflect back at me the more perennial issues that give certain video games value (likened even to some works of literature, art or music) contained something which much of today's developers sacrifice for general consumption of hardware - imaginative vision.
Chrono Trigger has survived the limited longevity of its original console format (SNES, 1995) and has continued with a force propelled by its fans and players with more than one re-release for the Sony Playstation in 1999 and another more recently for the handheld Nintendo DS in late 2008.

07 August, 2009

The Infinite


(M.C. Escher's "Snakes" (c) 2009 The M.C. Escher Company - the Netherlands. All rights reserved. Used by permission. www.mcescher.com)

After three visits to the Portland Art Museum, I still yearn to return for another sight of M.C. Escher's graphic works exhibition. The above print featured on the show's pamphlet was Escher's last, "Snakes" printed in 1969, and it hangs on the final wall before a stairwell to PNCA at 100. If you plan to go more than once, try walking through the partitioned room backwards by using said stairwell. Escher had many principles of craft and the exploration of non-linearity was certainly one of them. Let us honor his perspective with a likened sojourn.

Upon one visit, an observer had a magnifying glass in hand to see the Dutch master's detailed wood engravings. Revealed is a creator of practiced patience, an artist of spacetime. The exhibition includes examples of printing plates, in-process proofs, and early work from his tutelage as a graphic arts student (those pieces usually tucked away in numerous Private Collections). Entering the favored entrance are Escher's prints for the Book of Genesis, images of The Word. Early landscapes and illustrations of reflection, metamorphoses and the regular division of the plane - the breadth of his craft is done justice throughout PAM's walls.

Beside the video game describing Escher's laws of illusion and a small table of Escher books (with the recommended, in the opinion of this being, Exploring the Infinite: Escher on Escher), a strange but intriguing object awaits the keen observer: a fractal cube. Inside the cube are lights of differing colors, mirrors, and two corners to place one eye, on either side. Like Indra's jeweled net (see the Flower Ornament Scripture in Mahayana Buddhism or His Holiness the Dalai Lama's book The Universe In A Single Atom) your eye is reflected in all other points at the edge of this infinite space, while all spheres within reflect all other spheres. The sobering experience has not left me since my visit - it gives one the perception of the infinite that Escher hoped to create from making known the relativity of all perspectives.

Portland Art Museum is closed Mondays, open at 10 Tuesday through Saturday, 12 on Sunday, and closes at 5 all days except Thursday and Friday - open until 8. Enjoy the work with an appreciation all your own.

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For the Observatory's Grand Opening